What is your recyclable epoxy resin particularly suitable for and what is it not suitable for?
Klingler: It is suitable for fiber-reinforced composites, which can be used in transportation, aviation, building construction and more, where fire safety is important concern. In addition to that, it can be used for the coating of wood. It is transparent, self-healable, and protective coating, which is also fire safe. In addition, such materials can also be used in printed circuit boards, where at the end of life precious metals can be recovered by debonding them. Advanced materials combining thermoplastics and such vitrimers in structural application could also be of interest. We did not develop a single material for a specific purpose. The flame retardancy, recyclability and repairability allows it to be optimized depending on the intended use.
How do you contribute to more a sustainable plastic industry with your development?
Gaan: Most thermosets are either landfilled or incinerated. Therefor all the material including very valuable resources are lost.
What we offer is a new material that can be recycled by a thermal mechanical means, self-healing and chemical recycling. Our dream is to take apart all the components, which are used in building the thermoset material and to recover each, component and reuse it, and by this create a circular economy.
We offer this while also addressing the functionality of the material. Other research groups have also developed recyclable thermosets but do not address fire protection at the same time. We differentiate ourselves by offering both in one solution and for many applications. This is quite important as when used in a public place, fire protection is always necessary.
Do you have any future projects planned that you can tell me about?
Klingler: We are currently working on one project where we are looking into developing a natural fiber reinforced composite for different applications, including different transportation sectors.
Gaan: And we have another project ongoing where we are working on fiber (glass and carbon) reinforced plastics too.
The chemistry we developed is versatile and hopefully we can translate the same idea to other kinds of thermosets, for example, polyurethanes that are also used for coating ad glue applications and unsaturated polyesters, which are mostly used for making composite applications.