Kakashi-01
Chemical
- Mar 29, 2024
- 16
I am working on cleaning a small batch of HDPE flakes obtained from motor oil containers. My goal is to remove contaminants such as residual oil, and adhesives to evaluate the cleaning efficiency of the cleaning solution.The flakes I received from the processor were supposed to be pre-washed, but upon inspection, they still appear contaminated.
Since HDPE has very low surface energy, a surfactant that gives a very low surface tension and has a high wettability for HDPE is required. Based on this, I am reaching out to a supplier to find a suitable non-ionic surfactant for my application.
How to clean the flakes and how to measure whether they are clean given my limited equipment?
Since I do not have access to fancy lab equipment, only basic tools like containers, stirring rods, and heating sources and reagents which I will still purchase.My intial plan was to submerge the flakes in the cleaning solution to ensure contact and measure their weight before and after the experiment.However the weight difference might be too small to detect unless the flakes are heavily contaminated. Could I instead evaluate the cleaning efficiency based on the change in flakes color, stickiness (by touch) by counting the number of "cleaned flakes"without residual stickiness or visible contamination and compare this to the original number of flakes, and report the ratio as a measure of cleaning efficiency.
Since HDPE has very low surface energy, a surfactant that gives a very low surface tension and has a high wettability for HDPE is required. Based on this, I am reaching out to a supplier to find a suitable non-ionic surfactant for my application.
How to clean the flakes and how to measure whether they are clean given my limited equipment?
Since I do not have access to fancy lab equipment, only basic tools like containers, stirring rods, and heating sources and reagents which I will still purchase.My intial plan was to submerge the flakes in the cleaning solution to ensure contact and measure their weight before and after the experiment.However the weight difference might be too small to detect unless the flakes are heavily contaminated. Could I instead evaluate the cleaning efficiency based on the change in flakes color, stickiness (by touch) by counting the number of "cleaned flakes"without residual stickiness or visible contamination and compare this to the original number of flakes, and report the ratio as a measure of cleaning efficiency.