igus, the Germany-based manufacturer of motion plastics, announced the company has taken a further step towards sustainable plastic production. The company uses scrap produced from the injection molding process of its high-performance plastic xirodur® B180 to produce an ECO variant of the proven xiros deep groove ball bearing. The recycled version achieves almost the same technical properties and load capacity.
Even the best injection molding production cannot recycle plastics 100 percent. Defective parts and sprues are often unavoidable. This also applies to the production of deep groove ball bearings from igus, whose inner and outer rings are made of xirodur B180, among other materials. However, manufacturers can choose what happens to the excess material – discarding them as industrial waste is not an option for obvious reasons. It means that valuable raw material is lost forever. And emissions from incineration add to pollution.
“As a plastics manufacturer, we are aware of our responsibility to people and nature. So we have developed a process to recycle leftovers of the high-performance plastic xirodur B180 into a regranulate,” says Marcus
Semsroth, Head of Business Unit xiros Polymer Ball Bearings
Excess amounts of the engineered plastic xirodur B180 ECO, a characteristic green color, are used in injection molding production at igus to produce a recycled version of the xiros deep groove ball bearing.
Recycling variant with proven physical properties in tests
The new ECO variant is made of four components. The inner and outer races are made of recycled xirodur B180 ECO. The cage is made of recycled iglide J4 material, and the balls are optionally made of stainless steel or glass – a combination that ensures that customers do not have to sacrifice quality.
“Our test laboratory in Cologne proves that the recycled version of the ball bearing achieves almost the same technical properties and load capacity as the original,” says Semsroth. “The only drawback is that the recycled plastic xirodur B180 ECO is no longer FDA-compliant and therefore no longer suitable for direct contact with food.”
But there are so many non-food applications that make a recycled version worthwhile. Like the original, the green ball bearings enable quiet, hygienic dry-running in machines and systems, for example, in the printing, labeling, and packaging industries. Compared to traditional metal bearings, the ECO version of the polymer bearings also has many advantages. The deep groove ball bearing made of recycled plastic is corrosion-free, particularly resistant to chemicals, non-magnetic, and electrically insulating. In addition, it is up to 60% lighter and costs 40 percent less than the equivalent metal bearings.
Step by step to sustainable plastic production
Cylindrical plain bearings made of high-performance plastics have already been available in an ECO variant since mid-2022. For igus, the new recycled material xirodur B180 ECO is another step toward more sustainability in plastics production. For 16 of its iglide materials, igus reports the same CO2 footprint as Scope 3 emissions.
In addition, the company launched its Chainge program in 2019, a recycling initiative for discarded cable carriers from any manufacturer. As a result, the cradle-chain E2.1CG is the world’s first e-chain cable carrier made from 100 percent regranulate. Since the program’s start, igus has collected and recycled over 60 tons of high-performance plastics, thus transferring them from the traditional linear economy to the circular economy.
Another exciting “net zero” measure from igus is the company’s recent investment in Mura Technology Limited, whose technology converts non-recyclable plastic waste into oil within 20 minutes. The oil can then be used to produce new plastic granulate.
igus
www.igus.com