A proposal for quantifying the recyclability of materials (original) (raw)

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Abstract

It is becoming of empirical importance that recyclability be defined in such a way that engineers, economists, and policy makers can agree upon and use collectively. This paper defines recyclability as the ability of a material to reacquire the properties that it had in its virgin state, where virgin state refers to the material in its purest form before being processed or shaped for a specific use. Anything less than that can be measured as a degree of its recyclability, defined as recycling index ( R). It is here proposed that R of a material can be estimated by its devaluation (how much the material devalues during its first use), which is reflected by its loss of monetary value. This way, R can be calculated by a mathematical expression. Because of their thermodynamic and kinetic properties, as well as advances in their recycling technologies, most metals are recyclable. They are therefore used to establish a relationship that determines how truly recyclable materials should behave.

Publication:

Resources, Conservation and Recycling

Pub Date:

January 2002

DOI:

10.1016/S0921-3449(02)00056-3

Bibcode:

2002RCR....37...39V

Keywords: