Mar.4, 2014

3D printing technology empowers people to be both designer and manufacturer in their own home. But, let's be honest, it is so expensive. It uses plastic material for building objects, but each spool of plastic costs around $30.

But you can drive the cost down by making your own filament from empty shampoo bottles and milk jugs. A study led by Joshua Pearce of Michigan Technological University has shown that making your own plastic 3D printer filament from milk jugs uses less energy - often a lot less - than recycling milk jugs conventionally.

Household polymer waste, such as milk jugs, are a costly nuisance, either to recycle or to bury in a landfill. Pearce's team did a life-cycle analysis on a run-of-the-mill milk jug made from HDPE plastic. After cleaning it and cutting it in pieces, they ran it through an office shredder and a RecycleBot, which turns waste plastic into 3D printer filament.

Compared to an ideal urban recycling program, turning milk jugs into filament at home uses about 3 percent less energy, state the team. "Where it really shows substantial savings is in smaller towns like Houghton, where you have to transport the plastic to be collected, then again to be recycled, and a third time to be made into products," said Pearce, an associate professor of materials science and engineering/electrical and computer engineering. Then the energy savings skyrocket to 70-80 percent. And, recycling your own milk jugs uses 90 percent less energy than making virgin plastic from petroleum.

Recyclebot

Pearce also compared the cost of making your own filament with buying it.

"Filament is retailing for between $36 and $50 a kilogram, and you can produce your own filament for 10 cents a kilogram if you use recycled plastic," he said. "There's a clear incentive, even if you factor in the cost of buying the RecycleBot."

Commercial variants like the Filastruder cost under $300.

Joshua Pearce holds a DremelFuge chuck made from shredded plastic milk jugs.

But milk jugs are made of high-density polyethylene, or HDPE, which is not ideal for 3D printing. "It shrinks slightly as it cools, so you have to take that into account," said Pearce. "But if you are making something like a statue or a pencil holder, it doesn't matter."

This new recycling technology has caught the eye of the Ethical Filament Foundation, which works in partnership with organisations around the world to encourage the manufacture of ethically produced 3D printing filament, made from recycled plastic waste, as an alternative to the standard virgin plastic variety.


Another emerging organization, the Plastic Bank, is turning the problem of plastic waste and reshaping it into a solution. The Plastic Bank is a plastics return, repurposing, and 3D printing center that empowers the poor to harvest plastics as a currency for various opportunities including education, training, necessities and 3D printing services. Its mission is to remove plastic waste from the land, oceans and waterways while helping people ascend from poverty and transition into entrepreneurship.

"In the developing world, it's hard to get filament, and if these recyclers could make it and sell it for, say, $15 a kilogram, they'd make enough money to pull themselves out of poverty while doing the world a lot of good," he said.

The study, "Life-Cycle Analysis of Distributed Recycling of Post-consumer High Density Polyethylene for 3-D Printing Filament," by Megan Kreiger, Meredith Mulder, Alexandra Glover and Pearce, all of Michigan Tech, was published Feb. 12 in the Journal of Cleaner Production. An open access version is available from Academia.edu.



Posted in 3D Printing Materials

 

Maybe you also like:


 


Christopher West wrote at 3/15/2015 12:34:23 PM:

Im looking at recycling my wasted filaments and projects that didnt work out right. I like the idea of using recycled home plastics, the problem is identifying some of them. I have a jar of PYSSLA which is the same plastic as milk jugs but in nice little beads.... easy to feed into a filamaker (I plan to build my own over the next few months) anyway, i'll document my progress on westcpw.com or my special project, 3dbattleboards.com

Chase Myers wrote at 8/1/2014 9:21:39 PM:

If your looking for a cheap alternative Cheap3dfilaments.com has very low prices and Free Shipping on all orders

akka wrote at 7/13/2014 11:04:02 PM:

What about this? http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=hQeeJEpBYsg Is there a way to use theses filaments in a 3D printer?

Jonas wrote at 5/4/2014 4:55:07 PM:

Have you also heard of www.perpetualplasticproject.com?

Joe Larson wrote at 3/5/2014 7:02:30 PM:

HDPE is bad for 3D printing for more than the reasons listed here. It's too soft, it doesn't hold it's shape, it's sticky and will often times stick to the print head ruining the print. Still, buying plastic pelets and making your own filament is an exciting and economic possibility.



Leave a comment:

Your Name:

 


Subscribe us to

3ders.org Feeds 3ders.org twitter 3ders.org facebook   

About 3Ders.org

3Ders.org provides the latest news about 3D printing technology and 3D printers. We are now seven years old and have around 1.5 million unique visitors per month.

News Archive