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Plastics: Navigating the maze of dizzying acronyms

They are mostly all derived from fossil fuels like oil and natural gas

Published: Mon 16 Sep 2024, 2:53 PM

Updated: Mon 16 Sep 2024, 2:54 PM

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  • AFP

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A man pulls a handcart loaded with polystyrene boxes to load fish from a market in Mumbai on November 16, 2022. — AFP file

A man pulls a handcart loaded with polystyrene boxes to load fish from a market in Mumbai on November 16, 2022. — AFP file

Plastics are all around us -- from food packaging and drinking bottles to the insulation in our homes.

They are mostly all derived from fossil fuels like oil and natural gas, but what are the key differences between each type of plastic?

Here is a brief guide to the most commonly used plastics and their acronyms, as classified by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

Thermoplastics are the most common plastics, because they are so malleable when heated, and can be remelted.

Elastomers, meanwhile, can be stretched to a great extent and then regain their original form.

And thermosets are resins that become irreversibly hard when heated.

Within each family, an infinite number of polymers are mixed with a wide range of additives that are sometimes harmful to the environment or health.

These additives can change the colour of plastics, prevent ageing, make them flexible, increase impact resistance, or reduce flammability.

Polypropylene, or PP, is the most widespread plastic in the world (16 per cent), developed in the mid-1950s and used for automobile parts and food packaging as well as disposable trays.

High and low density polyethylenes each represent 12 per cent of global plastic use, according to the OECD.

HDPE, invented in 1933 by British engineers, is used for toys, shampoo bottles, pipes, engine oil cans and a variety of household objects.

LDPE, developed later in the 1950s, is widely used to manufacture flexible products such as reusable bags and food packaging film.

Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) is mainly used in construction for window frames, floor covering, pipes or cable insulation. It represents 11 per cent of global plastic.

Polystyrene (PS), invented in 1931 by IG Farben, represents five per cent of the world's plastic and is mainly used for food packaging.

In its unexpanded form, it is used for yoghurt packaging or in construction.

Expanded, it is used to package fish or for insulation in construction.

Also representing five per cent of plastic worldwide, polyethylene terephthalate (PET) is the most widely used plastic for drink bottles in their transparent form (water, sodas) and sometimes opaque versions for products such as long-life milk.

Polyurethane (PUR), developed in 1937 by Otto Bayer, is used in insulation and mattresses and represents four per cent of the world's plastic.

It is mainly used in refrigerator insulation, as padding foam in buildings, for adhesives, various coatings, shoe soles and in composite wood panels or surfboards.

In all, these represent 22 per cent of all plastic and include ABS (acrylonitrile, butadiene, styrene) used for tyres, PBT (polybutylene terephthalate), PC (polycarbonate), PTFE (polytetrafluoroethylene) and PMMA, another name for plexiglass.

This group is made from biomass such as corn, sugarcane, wheat or other residues, and not from petroleum products.

Their production generates fewer greenhouse gas emissions than fossil-based plastics but while their volume is increasing, it isn't keeping pace with other types of plastic.

Fibres made of different polymers are used in the textile industry and represent 13 per cent of all plastics globally.



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