Composite materials made of waste tires and polyurethane resin: A case study of flexible tiles successfully applied in industry

This research presents a case study of producing flexible tiles from rubber powders obtained from automobile tire waste using a polyurethane resin as a binder matrix. The process was made in collaboration with a company located in Colombia, where the manufacturing of these materials has been optimiz...

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Main Authors: Carlos F. Revelo, Mauricio Correa, Claudio Aguilar, Henry A. Colorado
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-12-01
Series:Case Studies in Construction Materials
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214509521001960
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spelling doaj-1e284735a056402787c627f2e8aca2d42021-09-07T04:13:26ZengElsevierCase Studies in Construction Materials2214-50952021-12-0115e00681Composite materials made of waste tires and polyurethane resin: A case study of flexible tiles successfully applied in industryCarlos F. Revelo0Mauricio Correa1Claudio Aguilar2Henry A. Colorado3CCComposites Laboratory, Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Universidad de Antioquia UdeA, Calle 70 N°. 52-21, Medellín, ColombiaEnvironmental School, Grupo de Investigación en Ingeniería y Gestión Ambiental, Universidad de Antioquia UdeA, Calle 70 N°. 52-21, Medellín, ColombiaDepartamento de Ingeniería de Metalúrgica Y Materiales, Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María, Valparaíso, ChileCCComposites Laboratory, Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Universidad de Antioquia UdeA, Calle 70 N°. 52-21, Medellín, Colombia; Corresponding author at: Universidad de Antioquia, Facultad de Ingeniería, Bloque 20, Calle 67 No. 53 - 108, Medellin, Colombia.This research presents a case study of producing flexible tiles from rubber powders obtained from automobile tire waste using a polyurethane resin as a binder matrix. The process was made in collaboration with a company located in Colombia, where the manufacturing of these materials has been optimized. The material is a green solution to an increasing worldwide problem, rubber car tires mostly put in landfills or burned to extract their reinforced steel wires instead of properly recycled. Several rubber contents and particle size distributions were investigated and tested. Tension, density, scanning electron microscopy, and thermo-gravimetric analysis characterization were used to evaluate the composites. Leaching analysis of contaminant are also included. Results shows that the amount of rubber used is quite large in comparison with the binder, maximizing the rubber in the formulations, and thus using more waste. The flexible characteristics of both resin and rubber enable these composites to be used in multiple applications. The tensile tests showed the composite can work very well for structural applications of low solicitations, such as wall covers, soft floors and barriers. The project is a successful example of a small-medium enterprise company that contributes to the circular economy of these highly pollutant materials.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214509521001960Waste tiresRubber tilesPolyurethane resinMaterials characterizationLeachingToxicity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carlos F. Revelo
Mauricio Correa
Claudio Aguilar
Henry A. Colorado
spellingShingle Carlos F. Revelo
Mauricio Correa
Claudio Aguilar
Henry A. Colorado
Composite materials made of waste tires and polyurethane resin: A case study of flexible tiles successfully applied in industry
Case Studies in Construction Materials
Waste tires
Rubber tiles
Polyurethane resin
Materials characterization
Leaching
Toxicity
author_facet Carlos F. Revelo
Mauricio Correa
Claudio Aguilar
Henry A. Colorado
author_sort Carlos F. Revelo
title Composite materials made of waste tires and polyurethane resin: A case study of flexible tiles successfully applied in industry
title_short Composite materials made of waste tires and polyurethane resin: A case study of flexible tiles successfully applied in industry
title_full Composite materials made of waste tires and polyurethane resin: A case study of flexible tiles successfully applied in industry
title_fullStr Composite materials made of waste tires and polyurethane resin: A case study of flexible tiles successfully applied in industry
title_full_unstemmed Composite materials made of waste tires and polyurethane resin: A case study of flexible tiles successfully applied in industry
title_sort composite materials made of waste tires and polyurethane resin: a case study of flexible tiles successfully applied in industry
publisher Elsevier
series Case Studies in Construction Materials
issn 2214-5095
publishDate 2021-12-01
description This research presents a case study of producing flexible tiles from rubber powders obtained from automobile tire waste using a polyurethane resin as a binder matrix. The process was made in collaboration with a company located in Colombia, where the manufacturing of these materials has been optimized. The material is a green solution to an increasing worldwide problem, rubber car tires mostly put in landfills or burned to extract their reinforced steel wires instead of properly recycled. Several rubber contents and particle size distributions were investigated and tested. Tension, density, scanning electron microscopy, and thermo-gravimetric analysis characterization were used to evaluate the composites. Leaching analysis of contaminant are also included. Results shows that the amount of rubber used is quite large in comparison with the binder, maximizing the rubber in the formulations, and thus using more waste. The flexible characteristics of both resin and rubber enable these composites to be used in multiple applications. The tensile tests showed the composite can work very well for structural applications of low solicitations, such as wall covers, soft floors and barriers. The project is a successful example of a small-medium enterprise company that contributes to the circular economy of these highly pollutant materials.
topic Waste tires
Rubber tiles
Polyurethane resin
Materials characterization
Leaching
Toxicity
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214509521001960
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AT mauriciocorrea compositematerialsmadeofwastetiresandpolyurethaneresinacasestudyofflexibletilessuccessfullyappliedinindustry
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