LINKS

Colourite - Maximising Cullet Additions in the Glass Container Industry

Container Lite: Light-weight Glass Containers - the Route to Effective Waste Minimisation

Container Lite - Opportunities for the Co-op to lightweight glass packaging

Feasability Study for the Reduction of Colour within the Glass Furnace

Materials recovery from waste cathode ray tubes (CRTs)

Study into the Interaction of Imported Wine Bottles and the UK's Cullet Supply

A Study of the Balance between Furnace Operating Parameters and Recycled Glass in Glass Melting Furnaces

Assessment of the International Trading Markets for Recycled Container Glass and their Environmental Applications

Recovered Container Glass: Development of test methods and inorganic contamination limits

Increasing collection and recycling of post consumer domestic window waste

Recycled CRT Panel Glass as an Energy Reducing Fluxing Body Additive in Heavy Clay Construction Products

New Approach to Cathode Ray Tube Recycling

RELATED LINKS

Glass Technology Services Ltd
Sheffield
Tel: +44 (0)114 290 1801
Fax: +44 (0)114 290 1851
Email: info@glass-ts.com

New Approach to Cathode Ray Tube Recycling

A cathode ray tube ( CRT) is composed of two different types of glass – one used for the funnel and neck sections and the other used for the screen. In addition to the glass there are other materials including ferrous and non-ferrous metals and coatings as well as plastic casings.

 

Mixed CRT glass (funnel, neck and screen glass) contains on average 5% lead oxide, 10% barium oxide and 2% strontium oxide which means waste glass of this composition is unsuitable for applications where metal oxides could leach into food products or ground water. This was a major driver for finding ways of recycling this material.

 

Glass Technology Services, in this project led by ICER, designed and tested two experimental techniques for removing undesirable metal oxides from the glass:

 

Glass Smelting:  to reduce the metal oxides to metal by melting the glass with reactants such as carbon or aluminium; in this process metal oxides form into metallic spheres and fall to the bottom of the glass melt;

 

Electrolytic Separation: applying a voltage across a molten bath of glass; in this process metal ions are expected to be attracted to the positive electrode, forming metal from the oxide.

 

The conclusion was that the removal of lead, barium and strontium oxide to an acceptably low level from mixed waste CRT glass was not practical under the experimental conditions investigated. GTS felt that further work needed to be directed at seeking suitable applications either for mixed waste CRT glass or for lead oxide glass and barium oxide glass with the proviso that if that did not happen heavy metal oxide reduction should be revisited.

 

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