Recycling Disassembled Automotive Plastic Components for New Vehicle Components: Enabling the Automotive Circular Economy

Neeki Meshkat, Matthew Korey, Amber M. Hubbard, Kathryn Slavny, Ashish L.S. Anilal, Arit Das, Logan Kearney, Soydan Ozcan, Uday Vaidya

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

As the automotive industry increasingly relies on plastic components to meet fuel efficiency and emissions targets, the challenge of managing end-of-life vehicle (ELV) plastics continues to grow. Currently, more than 80% of ELV plastics in the U.S. are landfilled due to limited economic incentives and technical barriers to recycling. This study examines a mechanical recycling pathway for thermoplastic components disassembled from ELVs and assesses their usability for reintegration into new vehicle parts. Four representative materials were chosen based on material labels embedded in recovered parts and aligned with their virgin industrial equivalents: polypropylene (PP), 10% talc-filled PP (PP-T10), 20% talc-filled PP (PP-T20), and a 20% glass-/mineral-filled polyamide (PA6 + GF7 + MF13). The materials underwent shredding, drying, and injection molding before being characterized by particle size analysis, density measurement, thermal analysis (TGA, DSC), mechanical testing, and heat deflection temperature (HDT) evaluation. The results in this work indicated that minor differences in crystallinity were observed and small differences between model materials and ELV materials could have contributed to these changes. Mechanical testing revealed that neat polypropylene suffered a 15–20% reduction in stiffness and tensile strength, but talc-filled polypropylene and glass/mineral-filled nylon retained >90% of their modulus, strength, and heat deflection temperature values relative to virgin controls. Differences between virgin and ELV materials could have been attributed to use life degradation, contamination during use life, or even chemical/processing differences in model materials and ELV materials. However, these findings suggest that mechanically recycled, disassembled ELV plastics can retain sufficient structural performance to support circularity efforts in the automotive sector.

Original languageEnglish
Article number180
JournalRecycling
Volume10
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2025

Funding

This work was written as a result of a Memorandum of Understanding between Oak Ridge National Laboratory and the American Chemistry Council. The work was performed in collaboration with Oak Ridge National Laboratory operated by UT-Battelle, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC05-00OR22725 with the U.S. Department of Energy. Work for this effort was performed under Employee Loan Agreement 2023-005 between UT-Battelle, LLC and the University of Tennessee.

Keywords

  • automotive recycling
  • circular economy
  • composites
  • plastics
  • recycling
  • sustainability

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