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posted by Fnord666 on Tuesday May 26 2020, @05:02PM   Printer-friendly
from the reduce-reuse-recycle dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

Revolutionary 'green' types of bricks and construction materials could be made from recycled PVC, waste plant fibers or sand with the help of a remarkable new kind of rubber polymer discovered by Australian scientists.

The rubber polymer, itself made from sulfur and canola oil, can be compressed and heated with fillers to create construction materials of the future, says a new paper unveiling a promising new technique just published in Chemistry—A European Journal.

"This method could produce materials that may one day replace non-recyclable construction materials, bricks and even concrete replacement," says organic chemistry researcher Flinders University Associate Professor Justin Chalker.

[...] "This new recycling method and new composites are an important step forward in making sustainable construction materials, and the rubber material can be repeatedly ground up and recycled," says lead author Flinders Ph.D. Nic Lundquist. "The rubber particles also can be first used to purify water and then repurposed into a rubber mat or tubing."

"This is also important because there are currently few methods to recycle PVC or carbon fiber," he says, with collaborators from Flinders, Deakin University and University of WA.

[...] The new manufacturing and recycling technique, called reactive compression molding, applies to rubber material that can be compressed and stretched, but one that doesn't melt. The unique chemical structure of the sulfur backbone in the novel rubber allows for multiple pieces of the rubber to bond together.

More information: Nicholas Lundquist et al. Reactive compression molding post‐inverse vulcanization: A method to assemble, recycle, and repurpose sulfur polymers and composites, Chemistry – A European Journal (2020). DOI: 10.1002/chem.202001841


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  • (Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Wednesday May 27 2020, @02:21PM (1 child)

    by Phoenix666 (552) on Wednesday May 27 2020, @02:21PM (#999646) Journal

    Plastic lasts basically forever, in fact that's one of the big problems with it. Unless exposed sunlight, which causes it to break up (though sadly not break down) - so paint your walls.

    If it's one thing bricks are not exposed to, it's sunlight. :-) Which works great if you live in Seattle.

    TFS says it's converting those materials into a rubber polymer. Rubber responds pretty dynamically to heat. Does that work in a brick form? Dynamic expansion and contraction would seem to work against the bonding agent between the bricks and allow the elements to invade. It's already a problem with regular brick (which keeps tuckpointers busy).

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  • (Score: 2) by Immerman on Thursday May 28 2020, @01:08AM

    by Immerman (3985) on Thursday May 28 2020, @01:08AM (#1000007)

    There's this thing called paint, perhaps you've heard of it?