Canon develops plastic sorting equipment
July 12, 2023
Canon Inc. announced that the company has developed process for sorting plastic pieces based on material, as a step of recycling plastic.
Canon’s tracking type Raman spectroscopy technology enables the identification of materials with high accuracy in a streamlined process, even when sorting plastic pieces of black shades, which have thus far been difficult to, and black plastic pieces mixed with those of other colours.
The company plans to market a plastic sorting equipment using this method during the first half of 2024.
In everyday life, various kinds of materials collectively known as plastics are used in a wide range of applications. To recycle them, used plastic pieces must be sorted, and their composite materials such as ABS1 and polypropylene (PP) must be accurately identified. Nowadays, near-infrared spectroscopy2 is the dominant method used in plastics sorting by material. However, plastic pieces made of black plastics, which are used in many household electronics, automobile upholstery and other items, cannot be sorted using this method because they do not allow visible light to penetrate nor reflect.
As a result, such plastics are instead reused as combustible fuel.
Raman spectroscopy, meanwhile, is a detection method that utilises laser light to illuminate plastic pieces to obtain molecular information of the substance, thus making possible the material detection of black plastic pieces. However, due to the small amount of scattered light emitted by the black plastic pieces, the measurement time is too long relative to the speed and throughput required for practical use.
Therefore, practical application of Raman spectroscopy to sorting black plastic has thus far proven difficult.
By combining Raman spectroscopy with Canon’s measurement and control equipment, the company has developed a process using tracking type Raman spectroscopy technology. This process ensures there is enough measurement time required for each piece of plastic according to its colour and allows the plastic pieces that contain black portions to be sorted in a single process at high speed and with high accuracy. With this efficient sorting system, Canon hopes to contribute to the maximisation of plastic recycling.
A key advantage of tracking type Raman spectroscopy technology is that, with Canon’s measurement and control devices, the exact position of plastic pieces on high-speed conveyor belts can be detected, and by scanning laser light accordingly towards the pieces, that laser light can be continuously emitted for the required duration of time to determine the material of the plastic pieces.
Canon’s PD-704 contactless measurement device (released in May 2021) enables accurate and fast measurement of objects on rapidly moving conveyor belts. In addition, Canon’s GM-2020 Galvano Scanner Motor (released in January 2022) allows laser beams to accurately track the objects transported on the conveyor belt, thus securing the necessary exposure times based on the colour of the plastic pieces.
Thanks to these technologies, even when conveying plastic pieces at high speeds, by controlling the scanning time of the laser beam, the effect of the different amounts of scattered light emitted by plastic pieces depending on their colours can be negated. This enables the application of Raman spectroscopy to that process, achieving both high-productivity and high-accuracy sorting.
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