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Dieffenbacher joins forces in the EcoReFibre research project

 Thursday, April 25, 2024

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In May 2022, DIEFFENBACHER and 19 organizations from seven countries joined forces in the EcoReFibre (“Ecological solutions for recovery of secondary materials from post-consumer fibreboards”) research project, which has 12 million euros in funding from the European Union. The project aims to recycle fiberboards at the end of their life cycle and use the recycled wood fibers to produce new fiberboard.

Following nearly two years of rigorous research, the consortium convened at DIEFFENBACHER in Eppingen and TOMRA in Mülheim-Kärlich on April 23 and 24, 2024, to showcase and evaluate significant interim findings from their research project. The meetings began with a welcome from DIEFFENBACHER CEO Christian Dieffenbacher. On the first day, approximately 40 attendees took a factory tour at DIEFFENBACHER’s headquarters in Eppingen, culminating in a visit to the DIEFFENBACHER Technical Center. This facility is the company’s extensively modernized and enlarged in-house testing laboratory and research center.

“We’ve added a second steel construction level to our Technical Center, creating 10% more space. Control cabinets and auxiliary equipment now sit here without disturbing the testing processes on the machines,” reports Axel Ganster, Team Leader Wood Technology at DIEFFENBACHER. “Along with modernizing the existing machines such as the ClassiSizer, oscillating screen and exhaust system, we’ve added a single-shaft shredder, a roller screen, mobile conveyor technology and a central data collection system. Overall, our Technical Center now offers more testing options with a wide range of materials,” he adds. Axel added further.

Fiberboard recycling was next on the agenda. During the demonstration, fiberboard material was shredded to chip size in the single-shaft shredder designed by DIEFFENBACHER. The chips were then fed into a DIEFFENBACHER ClassiSizer. “The ClassiSizer reduces the fiberboard material to the desired particle size,” explains Jean-Christophe Zimmermann, Head of Sales of DIEFFENBACHER’s Recycling Business Unit. “The material is resized by the high kinetic energy of the installed impact rotor and by the interaction of the individual particles with each other. After final screening on a DIEFFENBACHER oscillating screen, the fines produced can be used for the surface layer in particleboard production,” Zimmermann continues.

The latter portion of the demonstration at DIEFFENBACHER focused on the recycling of fiberboard into new fiberboard, showcasing the transformation of recycled material into new products. Utilising a DIEFFENBACHER ClassiScreen, waste wood supplied by EcoReFibre project partner Veolia was sorted into fines, chip-sized, and oversized fractions. Concurrently, contaminants like films, textiles, and other lightweight materials such as paper were efficiently removed from the waste wood.

“In a real-life application in a recycling plant, the oversized material would be reshredded and fed back into the process. The fines would be cleaned and used for particleboard production,” explains DIEFFENBACHER Technologist Jonas Réssy. “The chip-size material from the demonstration was made available to our partner TOMRA for the next day’s demonstration,” he says.

In Mülheim-Kärlich, the second day’s event focused on sorting the recycled wood by type. Using its X-TRACT X-ray sorting machine, TOMRA showed how impurities such as stones, glass, plastics and metals are detected based on their atomic density and removed from the recycled wood. This was followed by the actual sorting process. “Our intelligent GAINnext deep-learning technology reliably identifies different types of wood, for example, solid wood or fiberboard, based on shape, size or other visual characteristics. The result is a pure fiberboard fraction ready for recycling. I want to thank our partner DIEFFENBACHER for inviting us to contribute our innovations to this research project,” says Jose Matas, Segment Director Wood at TOMRA.

“The fiberboard fraction obtained from sorting can be used directly for fiberboard-to-fiberboard recycling,” explains Réssy. “The solid wood fraction can also be used as a substitute for fresh wood in fiberboard production. The remaining material not assigned to either of the two fractions can be used for particleboard production. We integrate the TOMRA machines into our DIEFFENBACHER plant concept so that trouble-free sorting is possible on an industrial scale,” he continues.

“These two intensive days have enriched the EcoReFibre project with important findings and taken it a decisive step forward,” summarizes Stergios Adamopoulos, Professor in Wood Science and Technology at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences in Uppsala, the consortium leader of the research project. “Many thanks to TOMRA and DIEFFENBACHER. It was an all-around successful event. All KPIs were met. This makes us particularly happy and shows that we’re on the right track with EcoReFibre,” he concludes.

Read more news on: DIEFFENBACHER, TOMRA, wood fibre

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