Developing the recycling technology of glass-reinforced products (GRPs).
Cubis are part of larger company called CRH, an international provider of buildingmaterials. Sister companies within the CRH group are involved in construction ofwindfarms in partnership with developers/operators (Farrans), and large-scalecement production (Tarmac). These sister companies will also benefit from thetechnology that this KTP is designed to transfer; by turning waste GRP products into a supply of material for new products. This KTP project will reduce the overallimpact that the CRH group has on the environment, by embedding technology thatallows CRH to reuse materials and massively reduce the amount of materialsbeing sent to landfill.
The GRP waste imposes a challenge for sustainable waste management approaches since they are hard-to-recycle materials, a composite of fibres and various polymers, and diverse in application, types, and composition. This is a technical barrier for developing a reliable and viable recycling technology that can handle most of the GRP waste streams.
In addition to the material characteristics and lack of a sustainable and commercially viable recycling technology, several market challenges hinder the development of the GRP recycling technology in industrial scale. Examples are uncertainty regarding the waste volume to be supplied consistently in the coming years, and low confidence of the end users, GRP manufacturers, in adopting the recycled glass fibres instead of the virgin glass fibres in their manufacturing lines. The last one is due to the different mechanical and physical characteristics of the recycled glass fibres compared to the virgin glass fibres. Therefore, the challenges exist at both ends of the recycling roadmap.
This project aims to investigate the challenges in recycling technology, the diverse characteristics of GRP waste, and the different mechanical and physical properties of the produced glass fibres compared to virgin fibres used in manufacturing new GRPs.
Regarding the recycling technology, the project is based on the recently developed GRP recycling pilot, developed through collaboration between CUBIS Systems, Innovate UK, and the University of Strathclyde. Recycling trials for different types of GRP wastes will be conducted to improve and optimise the process and register the challenges that need to be addressed for a larger recycling plant towards commercialisation. Recycling trials of various GRP wastes will shed light on their material characteristics and the required measures to recycle them. The produced glass fibres from recycling these GRP wastes will be reused in making new GRP types in lab-scale manufacturing lines through collaboration with other researchers and PhD students in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at the University.
Impact to the Company
Impacts to the Academic Team
Impacts to the KTP Associate
Linkedin