Scrap Preparation for Aluminum Alloy Sorting

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Adam Gesing Christopher Stewart Richard Wolanski Ron Dalton Larry Berry
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
17
File Size:
1716 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2000

Abstract

As the quantity of aluminum recovered from shredder scrap continues to increase, together with increased content of aluminum in automobiles, so does the economic incentive to further upgrade shredder scrap. This upgrade will be done by sorting and recovering the aluminum by specific usable alloy compositions. The metal recycling industry infrastructure needed to deal with the increased aluminum scrap supply already exists. It is an inverted pyramid structure that in North America comprises: 3000 scrap collection yards, 200 shredders, a dozen sink-float plants and one heavy metal sorting operation. The technology for upgrading aluminum sorted from shredder scrap is already either in industrial use or in the final stages of pilot plant development. However, the current automotive aluminum recycling infrastructure will need to adjust to deal with higher volumes of the metal from aluminum-intensive vehicles that will be appearing in shredder scrap -20 years from now.
Citation

APA: Adam Gesing Christopher Stewart Richard Wolanski Ron Dalton Larry Berry  (2000)  Scrap Preparation for Aluminum Alloy Sorting

MLA: Adam Gesing Christopher Stewart Richard Wolanski Ron Dalton Larry Berry Scrap Preparation for Aluminum Alloy Sorting. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2000.

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