Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-gvh9x Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-19T05:34:32.410Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Industrial ecology—The need to rethink the materials cycle: Some problems, solutions, and opportunities in the materials field

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 March 2011

Julian Szekely
Affiliation:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139
Gerardo Trapaga
Affiliation:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139
Get access

Abstract

The main thrust of this paper is to define the concept of industrial ecology and to discuss how its principles may be utilized to reconsider the materials cycle. Simply put, ecological principles imply that we minimize waste during manufacture and ensure that the products are recycled at the end of their useful life. Such a rethought materials cycle has to stress waste minimization and, at the same time, track energy flows and cost considerations simultaneously with the movement of the materials streams. In this paper, special attention is paid to recycling issues in metals production, municipal waste, and also to recycling issues pertaining to electronic materials. Comments are made on the driving forces and the barriers to industrial ecology, including economics, regulation, management and education, and on the international aspects of industrial ecology.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 1995

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

1COSMAT Report, Materials and Man's Needs, Materials Science and Engineering (National Academic of Sciences, Washington, DC, 1974).Google Scholar
2Cohen, M., Societal Issues in Materials Science and Technology, The David Turnbull Memorial Lecture, Materials Research Society, San Francisco, CA, 6 April 1994.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3The Greening of Industrial Ecology, edited by Allenby, B.R. and Richards, D. J. (National Academic Press, Washington, DC, 1994).Google Scholar
4Environmental Encyclopedia, edited by Cunningham, W., Ball, T., Cooper, T., Gorham, E., Hepworth, M., and Marcus, A. (Gale Research Inc., Detroit, MI, 1993).Google Scholar
5Watanabe, C., in Industrial Ecology: U.S&Japan Perspectives, edited by Richards, D. J. and Fullerton, A. B. (National Academy Press, Washington, DC, 1994).Google Scholar
6Fray, J., in Advanced Materials Technology International (Sterling Publications Limited, London, UK, 1991).Google Scholar
7The Management of Steel Plant Ferruginous By-Products, edited by IISI, Brussels (1994).Google Scholar
8Environmental Control Technology in the Steel Industry, edited by IISI, Seminar Proceedings, Rio de Janeiro (June 1985).Google Scholar
9Taylor, P., Sohn, H., and Jarrett, N., Recycle and Secondary Recovery of Metals, Proc. Int. Symp., Fort Lauderdale, FL, December (The Metallurgical Society, Warrendale, PA, 1985).Google Scholar
10Extraction and Processing for the Treatment and Minimization of Wastes, edited by Hager, J., Hanses, B., Pusateri, J., Imrie, W., and Ramachandran, V., Proc. Int. Symp., San Francisco, CA, Feb. 27–March 3 (Metallurgical Society, Warrendale, PA, 1994).Google Scholar
11DOE-MCC, Environmental Consciousness: A Strategic Competitiveness Issue for the Electronics and Computer Industry (March 1993).Google Scholar
12U.S. EPA, Metal Recovery, Environmental Regulation & Hazardous Wastes, June 1994.Google Scholar
13Electronic Industries Association–The Verity Group, Color TV & Computer Monitor Disposal Study (1994).Google Scholar
14Facility Level Pollution Prevention Benchmarking Study, AT&T Bell Laboratories QUEST Organization (November 1993).Google Scholar
15Publications of the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries, Inc.Google Scholar
16Desgeorges, J-P., Study Report on Valorization of Electrical and Electronic Products, Paris, France (1992).Google Scholar
17U.S. Bureau of Mines, Mineral Commodity Summaries, U.S. Department of Interior (1994).Google Scholar
18Merian, E., Metals and Their Compounds in the Environment (VCH Verlagsgesellschaft mbH, Weinheim, Germany, 1991).Google Scholar
19Munson, M., JOM, 30–36 (April 1994).Google Scholar
20Lakshmanan, V. I., Waste Minimization Initiatives–Selected Case Histories, in Metals and Materials Waste Reduction, Recovery and Remediation, edited by Liddell, K., Bautista, R., and Orth, R., Proc. Int. Symp., Rosemont, IL, October 3–6 (The Metallurgical Society, Warrendale, PA, 1994).Google Scholar
21Veys, F., BIR–A World Overview on Waste, Waste Management and Recycling International (Sterling Publications, Ltd., London, 1994).Google Scholar
22Forrest, D. and Szekely, J., JOM 43 (12), 2330 (1991).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
23National Geographic, 1994.Google Scholar
24Popular Science, December 1993.Google Scholar
25American Metal Market, 1993, Capital Cities/ABC Inc.Google Scholar
26Gosch, J., Will the EC follow Germany's lead in computer recycling?, Electronics, June 15, 1992, p. 11.Google Scholar
27Hoffmann, J.E., JOM, 43–48 (July 1992).Google Scholar
28Szekely, J., A Research Programfor the Minimization and Effective Utilization of Steel Plant Wastes, Iron & Steelmaker, January 1995, pp. 2529.Google Scholar
29Steiner, B.A., Environmental Issues Facing the Iron and Steel Industry, Iron & Steelmaker, December 1993, pp. 2731.Google Scholar
30Meadowcroft, T. R., Environmental Issues Facing Finishing Operations—A Perspective, Iron & Steelmaker, December 1993, pp. 3337.Google Scholar
31Maybe It Is Easy Being Green, Business Week, February 13, 1995, p. 80.Google Scholar
32Environmental Issues Council–Electronic Industries Association, personal communication, Nov. 1994.Google Scholar
33Lenssen, N., Nuclear Waste: The Problem That Won't Go Away, WorldWatch, paper 106 (December 1991).Google Scholar
34Technology and Environment, edited by Ausubel, J. H. and Sladovich, H. E. (National Academic Press, Washington, DC, 1989).Google Scholar
352nd Annual NAE Industrial Ecology Workshop, Woods Hole, MA, August 10–13, 1993.Google Scholar
36Szekely, J. and Trapaga, G., MPT Int. 17 (4), 3047 (1994).Google Scholar
37Szekely, J. and Trapaga, G., Technol. Rev. 98 (1), 3036 (January 1995).Google Scholar
38Marstander, R., in Industrial Ecology: International Management Strategies, edited by Richards, D. J. (Natl. Acad. Press, Washington, DC, 1995, in press). (International Conference on Industrial Ecology, Beckman Center, Irvine, CA, May 9–13, 1994).Google Scholar
39Szekely, J. and Trapaga, G., Modelling Simul. Mater. Sci. Eng. 2, 809828 (1994).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
40Frosch, R.A., Phys. Today (Nov. 1994).Google Scholar