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Recycled PET use in hot-fill bottles has no significant impact: Study

As per the study, conducted by Plastic Technologies Inc, converters and brand owners can use up to 50% good quality rPET in hot-fill bottles without negatively impacting performance

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BS B2B Bureau Holland, Ohio (USA)
The use of recycled polyethylene terephthalate (rPET) in hot-fill packages has no significant adverse impact on the bottles until the blend exceeds 50 percent, according to a research study conducted by Plastic Technologies Inc (PTI). 

As a leader in plastic packaging development, PTI conducted the study to provide information for brand owners contemplating including a percentage of Recycled PET in their hot-fill bottles as part of their environmental initiatives.

“Even at 100-percent rPET resin use, the performance of the bottle used in this study was still acceptable. However, the typically-thicker walls of hot-fill bottles may result in slightly more noticeable haze or yellowing than other applications such as very thin-walled water bottles,” observed Tracy Momany, vice president product development group, PTI.
 
This study was focused on evaluating virgin PET and two different rPET resins added to virgin PET at 25 percent, 50 percent and 100 percent levels. A 27-gm commercial 500 mL six-panel hot-fill bottle and preform were used for the study. Bottles containing recycled-content variables were processed similarly to maintain equivalent bottle wall thicknesses and maximise preform temperatures. The objective was to ensure that the only difference was the amount of recycled content.

The bottles were then tested to determine hot-fill and top load performance, wall thickness, colour, haze, crystallinity and acetaldehyde (AA) content. Following are the main study conclusions:

The study found that all of samples passed the standard performance specifications for hot fill bottles, even at high percentages of rPET. Shrinkage increased slightly as the recycled content grew above 50 percent, but the bottles remained within the specification. 

The drawbacks of high rPET content are increased yellowing and higher haze levels. However, these are aesthetic issues and do not impact performance.

The study concluded that converters and brand owners can use up to 50 percent good quality rPET in hot-fill bottles without negatively impacting performance. Recycled PET levels greater than 50 percent can also be used, however desired package aesthetics will drive the acceptable level. 

Plastic Technologies Inc provides preform & package design, package development, rapid prototyping, pre-production prototyping, and material evaluation engineering to the plastic packaging industry. 

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First Published: Sep 28 2016 | 5:24 PM IST

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