Spectroscopy and AI keep an eye on the ageing of plastic
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The knowledge gained from the project should make it possible to identify degraded materials in the closed PET deposit bottle cycle and in plastic sorting plants. This offers the option of making the best possible decisions for the processing and use of secondary plastics. Sorting out excessively degraded materials at an early stage ensures a higher quality of recyclate. This is essential, for example, in the production of food packaging such as returnable bottles.
Challenges due to material ageing
Plastics are repeatedly exposed to high temperatures and mechanical stress during the recycling process, usually in the extrusion and injection molding process. This can lead to ageing or degradation of the materials. If the concentration of heavily aged material in the manufacturing process is too high, the quality of the product could deteriorate. This can lead to the product no longer being allowed to be placed on the market due to quality defects. Although additives can compensate for these ageing processes to a certain extent, the only option for heavily aged material is downcycling or chemical recycling. However, there is currently a lack of industrial processes to quickly and reliably analyze and evaluate the ageing of plastic waste.
Research project pursues two possible approaches
In the first project approach, hyperspectral camera systems (HSI), which are already established in plastics sorting, will be expanded to include LED-based light sources for fluorescence excitation. In addition to the classic absorption spectra, excited fluorescence spectra can also be recorded. The analysis of this spectral data using AI enables the precise determination of the material ageing of plastic waste.
The second approach focuses on the development of AI-supported, inexpensive inverted spectrometers. To this end, relevant wavelengths are extracted from broadband measurement results from HSI measurements and an inverse spectrometer is built using this data. This should allow conclusions to be drawn about the process-related ageing of plastic materials. In contrast to a spectrometer, which covers a complete wavelength range, an inverse spectrometer only covers specific individual wavelength bands. This allows production costs to be reduced and a wide range of industrial applications to be achieved.
Great economic potential
“The knowledge gained from the research project can be used to promote a wide range of economic applications and enable SMEs to move towards a circular economy through the optimal use of secondary plastics,” says Frank Stüpmann, Managing Director of Silicann Systems GmbH.
“We hope that the packaging sector, among others, will benefit greatly from the developments in the project. This generates the largest proportion of post-consumer (PC) plastic waste and there are short product life cycles and consequently frequent processing,” adds Dr. Linda Mittelberg, Head of Quality and Life Cycle at SKZ. “The results can be used in PET deposit bottle cycles and plastic sorting plants in particular.”
Five project partners for innovative solutions
The joint project “SpectralAIge” is being carried out together with the medium-sized technology companies Silicann Systems GmbH from Rostock and HAIP Solutions GmbH from Hanover as well as the two research institutes Fraunhofer Institute for Factory Operation and Automation IFF from Magdeburg and the Plastics Center SKZ from Würzburg.
The SKZ is climate protection company and a member of the Zuse Association. This is an association of independent, industry-related research institutions that pursue the goal of improving the performance and competitiveness of industry, especially SMEs, through innovation and networking.
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