Muttenz, February 27, 2020 – Clariant teamed up with Lavergne, a world leader in the production of sustainable engineering resin from recycled plastic, to develop halogen-free flame-retardant polyester compounds made from ocean-bound plastics. With the first grade already commercialised, the advance is supporting demand from major electrical and electronics brand owners for flame retarded post-consumer recyclate grades for equipment parts.
Lavergne’s close collaboration with Clariant to develop halogen-free flame-retardant versions of its recycled polyester grades, arises from the company’s wider mission to create new uses for plastic, in this case polyethylene terephthalate (PET), recycled from ocean-bound waste streams. Ocean-Bound-Plastic (OBP) refers to plastic waste that is recovered from the over 8 million metric tons of plastic currently entering the oceans each year.
The first new flame-retardant compound Lavergne
VYPET™ OBP-FR has 30% glass fibre reinforcement and UL 94 V-0 flame rating at 0.8 mm thickness, which makes it suitable for many electric and electronic (E&E) plastic applications, like aesthetic and structural parts. This fully recyclable OBP-based compound has already successfully passed molding trials at part manufacturers and is commercially available.
Clariant’s flagship halogen-free
Exolit OP flame retardants, were chosen for their proven excellent environmental and health profile, as documented by the Clariant
EcoTain® label and a
GreenScreen Benchmark 3 assessment for the key phosphinate ingredient. Adding to the circularity of the innovation, Exolit OP grades have been confirmed as suitable for various recycling processes without losing their flame retardant properties. Furthermore, as a contribution to less fossile resource consumption, Clariant announced in October 2019 that selected Exolit OP grades will also become available as
‘Terra’ types, based on renewable carbon sources.
Intensive liaison and development work was required by Lavergne’s and Clariant’s experts to develop the right flame retardant and synergist formulation for this particular resin grade and also optimize the processing conditions of the compound. In fact, mechanical properties of OBP recyclates pose specific challenges because the repeated thermal treatment of polymers tends to progressively degrade the material. Because of the original compound’s success, the solution has now been extended to more than a dozen product lines, with each program undergoing additional testing prior to commercialization.
The joint project took more than a year to come to fruition, and both parties are eager to continue their working relationship. “Lavergne is the right place for plastics, not the oceans. We clean the oceans of plastics and turn the plastic wastes into high-end products. I am proud to be a part of Lavergne Green Innovation Team” comments Davood Bagheri, Polymer Scientist at Lavergne.
“By using Clariant’s Exolit OP flagship halogen-free phosphinate flame retardants in Lavergne’s recycled OBP blends, both companies have successfully brought to life the potential commercial impact of sustainability! This development reinforces Clariant’s continuing commitment to developing sustainable additives which, through value chain collaboration, can help bring plastics into a circular, more resource-efficient economy,” says Subra Narayan, Technical Market Manager for Clariant Flame Retardants in North America. Clariant’s collaboration with Lavergne also demonstrates its
EcoCircle in action, a corporate-wide initiative supporting the transition from a one-way plastics value chain to a circular plastics economy together with partners from the entire value chain.
“By using VYPET™ OBP compounds, we help manufacturers to reduce significantly the plastic carbon footprint. And this is only the beginning.” says Yoan Lavergne, Marketing Manager at Lavergne.
This project to develop flame-retardant recyclate grades ties up with the support of major electronics brand owners (OEMs) and their demand for post-consumer recyclates. The use of recyclates is part of sustainability claims by OEMs and is rewarded in ecolabel schemes like the American EPEAT and German Blue Angel. OEMs are also supporting the sourcing of OBP by sponsoring collection and
clean-up of waste. Whereas the applications targeted originally were less demanding components like
packaging trays, the end uses for recyclates are now spreading to
other structural parts of electronics equipment.