In an interview with K-Mag, Dr Flavio Ortigao talks about the special recycling process and how it differs from conventional methods and promises the sustainable reuse of plastics from research laboratories.
Dr Ortigao, could you please give us an insight into the mission and core activities of Re:Lab?
Dr Flavio Ortigao: Re:Lab provides a closed-loop, circular solution, plastics-to-plastics recycling for waste plastics from Life Science research laboratories. Today, there is no recycling for the over 6 million tonnes of research laboratory plastic waste, that is either incinerated or goes to landfill. We have developed a proprietary technology based on Low-Temperature Conversion (LTC). What differentiate our chemical recycling technology form others is that it occurs at a low-temperature (below 450°C) and at normal pressure.
In a comment on a LinkedIn post of us, you mentioned the difference between thermal processes above 4,500°C and those below 450°C. Could you elaborate on this difference? Could you elaborate on this difference? How does it affect the efficiency and feasibility of recycling?
Ortigao: Our technology is a special case of Gasification, which is the partial oxidation of plastics residues to syngas, a gas comprised of hydrogen and carbon monoxide that can be used for chemical synthesis of renewable chemical entities or even new renewable plastics.