The Ultimate Guide To PET Plastic

13 May.,2024

 

The Ultimate Guide To PET Plastic

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Polyethylene terephthalate, known to most as PET, is the most used thermoplastic polymer. You’ve probably seen the recycle triangle with the number 1 on many beverages and food containers, but that’s only the beginning of PET. If its scientific name or abbreviation doesn’t ring a bell, polyester might. The material is known to make most clothing and other furnishings articles. However, it starts as a clear, strong, and lightweight plastic.

 

What is PET Plastic?

PET has been around since the 1940s when chemists experimented with polymers to create textiles. The plastic’s popularity grew through the 1950s when researchers found a way to stretch PET into a thin sheet, this form being used mainly for video, photo, and packaging films. When the technology for blow-stretch molding was developed in the early 1970s, PET found a new form and its most notable use, PET bottles. Patented in 1973, PET bottles, compared to its container-predecessors (glass bottles, steel, and aluminum cans), were lightweight, safe, cheap, and recyclable. 

Properties of PET

By looking at a polyethylene terephthalate property table, we can understand and gain insight into how it would be working with PET plastic. While there are many variables at play, below, you will find a general material overview. Properties may vary slightly as there are different grades available.

Physical Properties Density 1,3 – 1.4 g/cm3 Water Absorprtion – equilibrium (%) less than 0.7

 

Thermal Properties Upper working temperature 115 – 170⁰C

 

Mechanical Properties Tensile Modulus (GPa) 2 – 4

 

Processing Properties Melting Point 260⁰C

 

Misconceptions of PET

Despite us interacting with PET daily, any mention of “PET” or “plastic” comes with a sense of taboo. We’ve associated the destruction of our climate with plastic waste. If you’re not picturing a polar bear surrounded by melting ice when “climate change” is mentioned, you’re probably imagining a sea of plastic floating in our oceans.

While PET is the most used plastic, it is also the most recycled. In 2017, 1.923 million tonnes of PET bottles were collected in Europe for recycling, seeing an increase of 2.9% from the previous year. In addition to that, the PET recycling rate was around 58.2%. Besides thinking of PET as one of the culprits behind plastic pollution, a thought that crosses many people’s minds is PET’s harm to our health.

It is essential to acknowledge that many governments worldwide have agencies regulating and providing scientific advice on any risks associated with foods and beverages. PET has been approved by the Food and Drug Association, Health Canada, the European Food Safety Authority, and countless more as safe for contact with food and beverages. While antimony oxide is used during the making of PET, it is only over more extended periods of exposure to heat that trace amounts of antimony may migrate into the beverages bottled in PET. These antimony levels are far below the safety thresholds, and the small amounts that might be found in PET contained foods and beverages are not anything to be concerned about as it does not pose any health risk.

If you still feel hesitant, check out your local food and beverage agency’s requirements on the use of PET containers for edible products.

 

The Pros and Cons of PET Plastic

Despite the many uses of PET and its popularity, there are certain limitations to it. Below we’ve compared the most common pros and cons when working with PET plastic.

Pros Cons The polymers are easily available and inexpensive Lower heat resistance High strength to weight ratio PET resins are susceptible to oxidation Highly transparent and shatterproof Partially derived from crude oils Easily Recycled Not biodegradable

 

PET vs PETG

Although PET is available as a homopolymer (a polymer where every monomer unit of the chain is the same), you can alter it to produce copolymers (a polymer derived from more than one species of monomer) desirable for specific applications. A known copolymer of PET is PETG, which is polyethylene terephthalate glycol-modified. One of the biggest misconceptions, especially in the 3D-printing filament industry, is that PET and PETG are the same. Unfortunately, this is not the case. PETG isn’t made from simply adding glycol to PET. PETG is formed during the initial polymerization process, where monomers/other components are combined to build the polymer up. Below you can see a table of the differences between the two.

PET PETG Strength – high impact capability and shatter resistance Strength – copolymerization keeps it from crystalizing and reduces cracking Better chemical resistance, impact resistance, and clarity Good chemical and impact resistance and clarity Typical applications – Bottles Typical applications – Cosmetic packaging

 

How Is PET Used?

Besides food and beverage containers, PET is a known and familiar material used to create clothing, furnishing, textiles, and more in its polyester form. Famous for its durability and resistance to many chemicals, it retains its shape well and is easy to look after. Besides its use for consumables and wearables, polyethylene terephthalate has been used by the music and marine vessel industries and as fabrics for conveyor belts and fabric coating.

The most common application done with PET is injection molding. Injection molding is the manufacturing process for producing various parts by injecting molten material into a mold and rapidly cooling it off. Once molten PET gets injected into pre-form molds, they can then be blow-molded to create the desired shape after cooling off. We typically see this when making PET bottles, but this same technique is beneficial when producing shampoo bottles, trays, and watering cans. 

A lot can be done with PET, given its universality, but what we’ve mentioned is just the beginning. 

Industrial Use of PET

Thanks to its excellent electrical insulating properties, PET plastic is widely used in the electrical and electronics industry. PET has replaced die cast metals and thermosets within electrical encapsulation, solar junction boxes, and smart meters, to name a few. Considering its thermal range and its lightweight, PET plastic is mechanically strong; this reason, next to its design freedom and other advantages, has made it a popular material for the automotive industry. Its high abrasion and UV resistance, high stiffness, and low cost make PET very attractive to use throughout an automobile. 

Seat belts and seat covers require high abrasion and UV resistance to secure safety and comfort while in a vehicle. With its high abrasion resistance and durability, polyester is used in automobile carpets; alongside being durable against soil, it provides noise insulation. These factors are also why polyester is a commonly used material within the fashion, textile, and home furnishing industries. Polyester fiber is great as insulation material in pillows, comforters, and upholstery padding. The high stain and tear resistance make it an attractive material for clothing, with additional offerings in fewer wrinkles and shrinkage (compared to cotton). 

At Fontys University of Applied Sciences, one of the largest and most prominent educational institutes in the Netherlands, the Natural Science wing is one of the only to offer bachelor courses in polymer studies. 3D printing is part of their research facility; it assists students in researching and enhancing existing polymers. Through filament extrusion, students and researchers have been able to study the properties and recyclability of PET. 

While Fontys’ students and researchers extruded PET filament, for those who want to go straight into 3D Printing, PET filament is available and accessible. Ultra Fuse FFF provides PET filament, which is as easy to use as PLA but more durable. With different colors to choose from and a sustainable option, you’re sure to find just what you need for your 3D printing projects. 

In a time where sustainability is needed in all industries, Freudenberg Performance Materials, a leading global supplier of innovative technical textiles, has found a way to benefit from PET recycling. The supplier from Germany has been able to give PET a second life by making nonwoven materials to seal roofs. Using recycled PET in this innovative way proves that PET shows a lot of promise in its use as virgin and recycled material.

 

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Can PET Be Recycled?

Recycling and reusing go beyond DIY projects at home; from being one of the most recycled plastics, PET has been given new lives within various uses and industries, mainly through becoming rPET.

Unlike PETG, where PET is glycol-modified, rPET means “recycled PET”. Bottles, containers, and other PET items collected and sorted go through shredding and drying, where then rPET is born and can be made into products such as blankets, insulation, car parts, clothing articles, and more! 

Although there is a limited global supply of rPET, there is a growing demand. This ever-increasing demand is seen in return bottle schemes; alongside this, the EU stated that by 2030, 90% of all PET products should get collected and reprocessed. Next to that, all newly produced bottles should include 25% rPET. The growing demand for rPET and the change in legislation to have rPET more commonly used are great facts when looking at how much environmentally friendlier rPET is to its predecessor. rPET uses 71% fewer greenhouse emissions, 79% less energy, and has under a quarter of the carbon footprint of the virgin material.

There are, however, two drawbacks that we should mention when comparing the two plastics. rPET can have a slightly different hue to PET due to impurities; however, using a mix of the two can quickly correct this. The other one being that rPET is more expensive than PET as high-quality granulate is in a lower supply. 

Aside from the economic and environmental factors, the recycled and virgin material are the same: they are both shatterproof, lightweight, and approved by various food and beverage agencies as being suitable for food, health, and home care products.

3D Printing and Recycled PET

If you’re looking for other ways to take control over your plastic waste, 3D printing filament could be an option. Through 3D printing, you have full control to create whatever you’d like.

The Extreme E racing series is the first sport conceived with concern for the climate crisis. By using electric racing in remote environments facing the threat of climate change, the series’ goal is to highlight and encourage all of us to take action to protect our planet’s future and wellbeing. That is why, while en route to their racing locations onboard St. Helena, the team will collect ocean PET, process it, and make it into filament, which will, in turn, be used to 3D print the winning teams’ trophies. Not only does this show how there are endless possibilities when working with rPET, but it is also a great example of closed-loop recycling. 

It might sound as easy as home projects when you want to move into the 3D printing possibilities of rPET, but you have to be aware that trial and error will occur; this is something we learned the first time we experimented with creating filament from rPET. It ended with several trial runs that resulted from adjustments made throughout, but it is doable! Since then, we’ve learned a lot about what it takes to create 3D printable filament from recycled PET, and have been successfully able to do so.

Be warned, patience is required.

 

How Can PET Be Applied in 3D Printing?

Earlier, we listed some of PET’s properties, but some properties and variables will be more of an interest to you when you want to extrude and create PET filament. Aside from the physical and mechanical properties listed earlier, thermal and processing properties are fundamental here.

If you want to learn more, please visit our website PET plastic recycling HongKong.

An important reminder, however, is that the processing properties may differ depending on your PET manufacturer. That’s why we suggest following the guidelines given to you by them and being aware that depending on the hardware you’re using to extrude the filament, you may have to adjust the different variables as the settings you use on one extruder might not work on another. Processing properties are more “applied” and “hands-on” than other properties, and you’ll have to work and change as you go. 

Thermal Properties Upper working temperature 115 – 170⁰C Lower working temperature -40 – -60⁰C

 

Processing Properties & Conditions Melting point 260⁰C Drying Temperature 120⁰C Extrusion Temperature 270-290⁰C

 

5 Steps To 3D Printing With PET

Now that we know which properties we should pay attention to, we can get into the steps you’ll need to take to repurpose PET into a 3D print successfully.

1. Prepping Your PET

Before getting your PET products to a size that can go through an extruder, you need to morph it into a shape that can go through a shredder. There are three approaches you can take with this Crushing it with your hands, so it’s narrow enough to feed through a shredder. Use a vacuum to vacuum out the air and deflate the plastic. Cutting your material with scissors into smaller and more manageable pieces.


2. Shredding

The best solution is to use a shredder to get your PET plastic into more refined pieces (smaller than 4mm). This process is faster than if you were to continue cutting with scissors. To extrude the regrinds, they have to be small enough for your filament extruder to melt it and push it through; if it’s too big, not only may it not fit, but it may cause a blockage.

 

3. Drying

PET is hygroscopic, meaning that it absorbs moisture from the air. When extruding a material, moisture can affect the quality and texture of the filament. To dry your regrinds, you can either choose to use an industrial dryer or dry it in your oven at home! Once it’s dried and as much moisture as possible is drawn from the regrinds, you can start extruding. 

4. Extruding

Before extruding, you need to remember that there are different PET grades, and each filament extruder will require various changes depending on this. Experimentation is key here. We suggest testing out different temperatures in steps of 5°C while waiting in between to look at the tolerance. Once you feel confident in the set temperatures, it’s time to change the extrusion speed in increments of 0.5RPM and the fan cooling temperature. 

Once you’ve extruded your filament, if you don’t plan on using it to 3D print immediately, then store it in a dry place or vacuum seal it to prevent it from drawing in moisture from the air. 

5. 3D Printing

Your rPET filament is now ready for you to print! Experimentation is the name of the game here, from extruding and continuing with the 3D printing. Before going full speed ahead and printing the actual print you want to create, we suggest trying a smaller print. This way, you can see how your rPET filament will react. 

Some variables you should keep in mind are the temperature and printing settings. If you have too high of a temperature setting, your filament might melt too quickly, and your 3D print won’t be even. Here are general guidelines to which settings you should put your 3D printer to, but, as mentioned earlier, every hardware is different, and you might have to react to what output you’re receiving.

Nozzle size: ≥0.15mm Layer height: ≥0.1mm Flow rate: ±110% Print temp: ±200 – 240⁰C Print speed: High Retraction: Yes ±6mm Heat bed: ±65 – 75⁰C Fan speed: 0-30% Experience level: Beginner


Once you’ve tested out your printer with your rPET, you can create your final design! While there is a limit on the settings, there is no limit to how creative you can get with your 3D prints!

If you’re not into 3D printing, or have access to the equipment necessary to reuse PET in this way, luckily there are countless projects that you can get started on to give it a new life.

How Can I Repurpose PET?

It can be easy to recycle PET at home, give it a new life, and enjoy the time as a creative outlet. PET can be recycled in multiple ways at home with various degrees of difficulty. Here are three projects which will help you recycle with it at home:

  1. PET typically starts as food containers and can easily continue that path; reuse your coffee creamer bottles to store sugar, spice, and everything nice for minimal storage and an easier pour.

  2. Keeping a plant alive can be tricky, but this craft will be just the incentive you needed to continue trying! Plant pots can be expensive in the long run and not as colorful as some of us may like. Turn your empty bottles into hanging planters and customize them by painting the outside with your favorite color!

  1. Fight plastic waste with plastic waste! Turn your larger PET bottles into a plastic bag dispenser. Make it easier for yourself to collect something that is typically seen as a one-time use option, and use the plastic bags for varied uses! Start by gathering the bags you get from your grocery runs and use them as trash can linings, storage bags, and the bags you continue to use for your grocery runs! If the bags show signs of wear and tear, you can decide to create gift bows for the final piece of a gift or make custom coin pouches. Like PET bottles, plastic bags have huge repurpose potential!

Hopefully, if you didn’t know before, you know now why PET is still one of the most used plastics. Its universality is shown as different products within one industry and through its versatility in various sectors. Not only can it be recycled and reused into a product with the same level of quality as the virgin product, but it is the most recycled plastic out there! These qualities enable it to contribute to a circular economy in ways such as return schemes. 

Its varying application forms and reusability make it an attractive material to extrude filament and 3D print with, all the while gaining valuable knowledge on its properties.

 

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Five Hong Kong Recycling Myths That Will Shock You


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Mins Read

Hong Kong’s recycling infrastructure is woefully lacking: most citizens are not educated about how best to recycle; there is no mandatory residential recycling scheme; there are no incentives for businesses to recycle; the government department that deals with waste management is separate from the one responsible for recycling; the city lacks adequate collection channels and the few plastic recycling plants we have must import plastic in order to keep their machines working because the volume of collected plastic recycling is so low. We’ve got 101 problems and a whole lot of misunderstandings. Below we highlight five of the most common (and surprising) recycling myths. 

But first, our friends at Live Zero ask: why is there a lack of plastic recycling in Hong Kong?*

  • In Hong Kong alone, 2,000 tonnes of plastic waste is produced daily. Due to the lack of recycling outlets in HK, 95% of recyclable plastic waste was exported to mainland China. Now that China has stopped accepting all of our waste, less than 1% is recycled. The rest ends up in landfills with all other non-recyclable plastics.
  • The harsh reality is that recycling plastic is not a lucrative enough business for the Hong Kong government to invest funds into.
  • Collecting, sorting, storing and transporting recycled plastics is more expensive than buying raw materials.
  • Essentially, it’s more cost effective to make new plastic than use recycled plastic.
  • Furthermore, recycling facilities in HK are extremely basic: all plastic waste is sorted by hand, which puts further limitations on what CAN be recycled.

1. Compostable Food Packaging Is The Most Eco/Best Choice

Over the past few years, many responsibly minded business owners have made the switch from plastic packaging to plant plastics or other compostable packaging options. And in many other cities across the world, this would be a fantastic switch. But here in Hong Kong, it’s the wrong choice. Hong Kong has no industrial composting facility, which is what these compostable materials require. Worse even, when people mix compostable plastics with regular plastics in their recycling bins, it renders the bag un-recyclable as the recycling plants and collection companies don’t have the resources to resort the items. The only exception are packaging that is marked home compostable, meaning it can decompose in your home compost pile, but again the vast majority of Hong Kongers do not compost in residential buildings.\

2. Biodegradable Means It Will Decompose Anywhere

The word biodegradable can be misleading. In a general sense, it does mean a product that biodegrades. But how long something takes to biodegrade and what conditions need to exist for it to biodegrade is another matter. Landfills tend to be a poor environment for biodegrading- they do not offer the right air, heat mix and water conditions for products to fully break down. Long story short? Most biodegradable products in Hong Kong go straight to our landfills and stay there.

3. We Don’t Have Glass Recycling

This was true for many years but no longer. Hong Kong has gotten its act together on the glass front, which is great because glass is probably the best option for food storage and glass is infinitely recyclable: it recycles at 100% (no loss of material) over and over with no loss in quality or purity. Though late to the game, the Hong Kong Government has launched the Glass Bottle Recycling Programme. However, rather than being recycled into new glass, most of the collected glass is crushed and used to fill government reclaimed land projects.

4. All Plastics Can Be Recycled

Another very common misconception- the reality is that most plastics are not recyclable in Hong Kong. Plastics are not created equally. There are officially around seven types of plastic materials – here is a complete guide – and in Hong Kong only type Type 1 (aka Polyethylene terephthalate, also known as PETE or PET), Type 4 (aka Low-Density Polyethylene or LDPE)  and Type 5 (aka polypropylene or PP) are able to be recycled by our local plants. Type 1 covers all your food takeaway containers and single-use beverage bottles, as well as household cleaning product bottles. Type 4 would be your crushed plastics, food plastic wrappings & packaging & shopping bags, and Type 5 plastics include yogurt cups, medicine containers, condiment bottles, microwave-safe plastic containers. But unless these types of plastics are properly sorted (no plant plastics) and cleaned (no food stains, labels off, non plastic lids removed), and brought to the right recycling plant, they end up in the landfill. Further, in Hong Kong, our recycling plants only have the capability for for Type 1 PET and 4 LDPE. All other plastics are baled and sent to South East Asia.

5. Tetra-Paks Are Recyclable

Juices, plant-based milks, coconut water: as we get healthier we love our to-go beverages and most of them come in Swedish packaging giant made Tetra-Paks, a type of aseptic, multi-layer packaging technology that is made from wood in the form of paperboard, as well as thin layers of aluminium and polyethylene. Due to the multi-layered design, Tetra-Paks (and their market competitors) require special machinery to be recycled as each layer needs to peeled off and disposed of specifically.

LISTEN To Our Zero Waste Journey Podcast Episode 2: RECYCLING IN HONG KONG

This post was edited and content added on October 15 2018.

*Reprinted and based on Live Zero’s IG post found here. 

Lead photo courtesy of Pexels.

Author

  • Sonalie Figueiras

    2021 Women of Power, 2019 GEN T Honoree, V Label Global Hero, 2 x TEDx Speaker: Serial social entrepreneur & trends forecaster Sonalie Figueiras is a sustainability expert, food futurist and eco-powerhouse who has been inspiring global audiences for over a decade with practical steps on how to fight climate change. Known as the Green Queen of Asia, she is the founder and Editor in Chief of the award-winning Green Queen - the region’s first impact media platform that educates millions of readers on the connection between health, sustainability and the environment and showcases future solutions. She is also the co-founder and CEO of organic sourcing platform Ekowarehouse and climate tech SaaS Source Green, which helps consumer brands quit plastic packaging thanks to proprietary plastic reduction software. In addition, Sonalie is a global keynote speaker and an advisor to multiple mission-driven startups and NGOs, and a venture partner to several VC funds.


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