The Netherlands is known globally for its widespread use of bicycles and some call it a “cycling nation”. Indeed, many Dutch inhabitants own a bike and cycle frequently. Numbers show that 84% of the Dutch inhabitants from age 4 years and older own a bike. Those owners have an average of 1.3 bikes per person. This results in 18 million bikes in the Netherlands and 13.5 million bike owners.6 The Dutch use their bike as a means of transportation, but also for sports and exercise. Bike-use fits well in an active lifestyle and it is highly plausible that cycling is responsible for a large part of the daily physical activity in Dutch youth. It is estimated that Dutch people have on average a 6 months longer life expectancy attributable to bicycle use.7 It seems that the nation itself is well shaped to cycle: no large mountains, only a few small hills, and an extensive layout of cycle paths and routes in every city and village. In many urban areas separate cycle paths are very common. Our results show that many Dutch children use the bike as their way of transportation. It was demonstrated that active transportation is responsible for a large part of schoolrelated physical activity in Dutch youth.8 80% of 12-17 year-old children cycled three or more days to or from school/work.9 This resulted in an ‘A’ for the indicator active transportation (walking is included in the grade as well). Active transport is associated with increased total physical activity among youth.10,11 Also evidence is reported for an association between active transport and a healthier body composition and healthier level of cardiorespiratory fitness among youth. Although Dutch children accumulate a lot of daily physical activity through cycling, it is not enough to meet the current national physical activity guidelines of 60 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity per day. Even though cycling is an important component to the amount of daily physical activity, Dutch youth are not cycling to health
The production of denim makes a significant contribution to the environmental impact of the textile industry. The use of mechanically recycled fibers is proven to lower this environmental impact. MUD jeans produce denim using a mixture of virgin and mechanically recycled fibers and has the goal to produce denim with 100% post-consumer textile by 2020. However, denim fabric with 100% mechanically recycled fibers has insufficient mechanical properties. The goal of this project is to investigate the possibilities to increase the content of recycled post-consumer textile fibers in denim products using innovative recycling process technologies.
Recycling of plastics plays an important role to reach a climate neutral industry. To come to a sustainable circular use of materials, it is important that recycled plastics can be used for comparable (or ugraded) applications as their original use. QuinLyte innovated a material that can reach this goal. SmartAgain® is a material that is obtained by recycling of high-barrier multilayer films and which maintains its properties after mechanical recycling. It opens the door for many applications, of which the production of a scoliosis brace is a typical example from the medical field. Scoliosis is a sideways curvature of the spine and wearing an orthopedic brace is the common non-invasive treatment to reduce the likelihood of spinal fusion surgery later. The traditional way to make such brace is inaccurate, messy, time- and money-consuming. Because of its nearly unlimited design freedom, 3D FDM-printing is regarded as the ultimate sustainable technique for producing such brace. From a materials point of view, SmartAgain® has the good fit with the mechanical property requirements of scoliosis braces. However, its fast crystallization rate often plays against the FDM-printing process, for example can cause poor layer-layer adhesion. Only when this problem is solved, a reliable brace which is strong, tough, and light weight could be printed via FDM-printing. Zuyd University of Applied Science has, in close collaboration with Maastricht University, built thorough knowledge on tuning crystallization kinetics with the temperature development during printing, resulting in printed products with improved layer-layer adhesion. Because of this knowledge and experience on developing materials for 3D printing, QuinLyte contacted Zuyd to develop a strategy for printing a wearable scoliosis brace of SmartAgain®. In the future a range of other tailor-made products can be envisioned. Thus, the project is in line with the GoChem-themes: raw materials from recycling, 3D printing and upcycling.
De kunstgrasberg in Nederland is groeiende. In april 2019 hebben een aantal bedrijven, zijnde ketenpartners, de handen in een geslagen om dit te doen veranderen, en hebben GBN Artificial Grass Recycling (GBN-AGR) opgericht. Dit heeft in juni 2020 geresulteerd in een fabriek voor de recycling van de kunstgrasmatten. De eindproducten van deze fabriek zijn circulair grondstoffen zoals circulair zand, circulair SBR, circulair TPE en RTA. Deze grondstoffen worden op traditionele productiewijze in mallen geperst en waaruit rubbertegels, kantplanken, picknicksets worden vervaardigd. Gezien de hoeveelheid aan kunstgrasmatten is er behoefte vanuit de ketenpartners om meer en hoogwaardige producten te realiseren. In dit onderzoek wordt een verkenning gedaan naar de mogelijkheid om gerecycled kunstgras te gaan 3D printen. Zo dat er in de toekomst hoogwaardige en vernieuwde producten uit te vaardigen zijn. Ook zijn de huidige 3D printbedrijven nog niet bekend zijn met circulaire grondstoffen uit gerecycled kunstgras, aangezien het 3D printfilament daarvan nog niet voor handen is. Via materiaalonderzoek, ontwikkeling van 3D printfilament, testen van het filament wordt de eerste aanzet gegeven om tot een grondstof te komen die voor hoogwaardige producten kan worden ingezet. Tevens wordt een productontwerp voor een product gecreëerd. En wordt er een prototype, eventueel op schaal gefabriceerd met het 3D printfilament afkomst van de circulaire grondstoffen van het gerecycled kunstgras. Het einddoel is om de kunstgrasberg in Nederland te doen krimpen, door: - Aantoonbaar te maken aan de maakindustrie dat gerecycled kunstgras een basisgrondstof kan zijn voor producten. - 3D printen een productiemethode is dat voor bepaalde toepassingen voordelen kan hebben om hoogwaardige producten van gerecycled kunstgras mee te maken, naast de al bestaande traditionele productiemethoden.