Submitted:
08 June 2026
Posted:
09 June 2026
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
- The reduced quality of PCR compared to virgin material, which manifests itself in altered processing properties and in reduced mechanical properties;
- Economic hurdles, i.e., high prices for high-quality PCR compared to virgin material;
- Limited availability of PCR; demand currently exceeds supply, partly because many production facilities are currently ceasing operations;
- Requirements for classification in the regulations are too vague, such as the lack of mandatory information on relevant mechanical properties on the data sheet, i.e., no suitable classification;
- Lack of testing standards for type testing that would enable a systematic assessment of material quality.
- A methodological framework based on EN 13476, defining suitability as the intersection of material classification and application-specific requirements profiles. The framework places particular emphasis on long-term behavior as the core challenge of PCR classification, addressing material degradation through multiple recycling cycles, thermodynamically incompatible PE/PP blends, non-polymeric contamination, and the validity of established extrapolation methods and safety factors for PCR.
- A review of additive strategies like restabilization, compatibilization, chain modification, and recyclate-compatible functional additives as one of the main technical solutions for closing the gap between PCR properties and application requirements without resorting to fillers that compromise recyclability.
2. Prerequisites for the Sensible Use of PCR
3. Establishment of a Quality-Assured Material Stream
3.1. Basic Procedure
3.2. Derivation of Application-Relevant Properties from the Requirements Profile
3.3. Evaluation of Long-Term Properties as a Classification Feature
3.3.1. Material Degradation Due to Multiple Recycling Steps
3.3.2. Blends of PE and PP
3.3.3. Non-Polymeric Contaminants
3.3.4. Extrapolation and Safety Factors
3.4. Measures to Adjust the Characteristics of PCR
3.4.1. Additive Strategies for PCR
3.4.2. Restabilization Through Suitable Stabilizer Packages
- tri-hydroxy-substituted phenylpropionates exhibit the lowest bond dissociation energies (BDE) of the O–H bond;
- their DPPH radical scavenging rate correlates very well with process stabilization in the microextruder;
- and that, in PP model formulations, they achieve stabilization in the melt that even surpasses that of classical phenols in some cases, at moderate usage levels.
3.4.3. Compatibilization of PE/PP Blends
3.4.4. Chain Modification and Rheological Adjustment
3.4.5. Recyclability as a Design Criterion for Additive Formulation
- alditol polyols (e.g., erythritol, xylitol, mannitol) degrade hydroperoxides, address carbonyl groups via acetal formation, and complex transition metal ions;
- at the same time, α-tocopherol is regenerated from the polyols via hydrogen transfer;
- and that this bio-based combination, in multi-extrusion tests, showed a higher melt viscosity stability over all 5 cycles than conventional phosphite-based systems, in some cases with a lower phosphorus content.
3.4.6. State of Research and Potential of Additive Formulation for the “Repair” of Recyclates
- the restabilization of PCR-PP and PCR-PE (classic phenol/phosphite packages, bio-based antioxidants);
- compatibilization and morphology control in PE/PP-containing PCR;
- chain modification and the role of vinyl groups in PCR-PE-HD [68],
- as well as with alditol- and tocopherol-based systems as alternatives to phosphites [69].
- Additive formulation is an effective lever for “repairing” recycled materials, particularly concerning thermo-oxidative stability, process stability, and SCG behavior.
- The potential benefits are highly dependent on the material and batch; precise characterization (including vinyl content, degree of oxidation, and blend composition) is a prerequisite for targeted strategies.
- New, often bio-based classes of stabilizers (cinnamate/phenylpropionate-based antioxidants, alditols, α-tocopherol) open up options for reducing the petrochemical additive load without compromising performance.
- Over-addition and additive accumulation over multiple life cycles can create new risks (NIAS issues, migration, interactions); therefore, transparent documentation, appropriate test plans, and normatively defined upper limits are necessary.
- Additive formulation does not replace the need for systematic classification and type testing, but must be embedded within these processes (DQL, DPP, type/BRT/PVT/AT classification system, see section 3.1).
4. Conclusions
- Requirements profiles are oriented toward virgin material, while the classification scope for PCR remains insufficiently defined. This discrepancy is systemic rather than incidental. It can be addressed only through aligned development on both sides: refined classification frameworks for recyclates and recyclate-aware requirements in product standards.
- Non-pressure applications with moderate requirements for compressive strength and long-term stress resistance are suitable candidates for defined PCR proportions. A complete substitution of virgin material does not yield the best technical performance nor is it economically viable in most applications [45,67], whereas blends of virgin and recycled materials, or the use of PCR in specific structural layers, are viable alternatives.
- The use of additives can shift the boundary of what is achievable: targeted restabilization, compatibilization, and chain modification have been shown to restore mechanical and rheological properties to within standard tolerances, provided that additive choices are documented and embedded in the classification system.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
| AT | Audit Test |
| ATR-FTIR | Attenuated Total Reflectance Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy |
| BDE | Bond Dissociation Energy |
| BRT | Batch Release Test |
| CAS | Chemical Abstracts Service |
| CEN | European Committee for Standardization |
| DPP | Digital Product Passport |
| DPPH | 2,2-Diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl |
| DQL | Data Quality Level |
| DSC | Differential Scanning Calorimetry |
| EN | European Norm |
| HALS | Hindered Amine Light Stabilizer |
| ISO | International Organization for Standardization |
| MFI | Melt Flow Index |
| MFR | Melt Flow Rate |
| MVR | Melt Volume-flow Rate |
| NIAS | Non-Intentionally Added Substances |
| NMR | Nuclear Magnetic Resonance |
| OIT | Oxidation Induction Time |
| PCR | Post-Consumer Recyclate |
| PE | Polyethylene |
| PE-HD | High-Density Polyethylene |
| PE-LD | Low-Density Polyethylene |
| PIR | Post-Industrial Recyclate |
| PP | Polypropylene |
| PVC | Polyvinyl Chloride |
| PVC-U | Unplasticized Polyvinyl Chloride |
| PVT | Process Verification Test |
| SCG | Slow Crack Growth |
| UV | Ultraviolet |
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| Action | Description | Relevant material properties |
Relevant product properties |
Test standard (example) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mechanical stress | Soil stresses from the ground and traffic |
Modulus of elasticity, tensile strength, yield strength, elongation at break |
Creep behavior, flexural strength |
DIN EN ISO 9969, ISO 527-1, DIN EN ISO 899 |
| Thermal effects | Temperature cycling, elevated operating temperature | Coefficient of thermal expansion, glass transition temperature, melting temperature |
Heat resistance |
ISO 75, ISO 11359 |
| Chemical exposure | Media exposure | Chemical resistance | Media resistance |
ISO 175 |
| Abrasion | Solid particles in wastewater | Surface hardness, density, molecular weight | Abrasion resistance |
DIN EN ISO 2039, DIN EN 295-3 |
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