
Adelmann Umwelt GmbH, based in Karlstadt, Germany, says it has built some 60 refrigerator recycling plants that are now in operation worldwide.
The company says the plants are designed, assembled and commissioned with respect to both technical features and characteristics in process engineering. The plants can be operated according to customer needs.
The recycling system consists of a shredder, a separation unit for PUR foam, iron, synthetic material and aluminium/copper, a pelleting press and an exhaust air decontamination system.
Before the refrigerators are disassembled, the loose inner parts are removed. The operation is followed by the disposal of the oil-CFC/Iso-butane-mixture with the coolant suction system.
The recyclable materials – aluminium/copper, iron, plastic and PUR-foam – are separated subsequently:
The shredded PUR foam is separated through wind sifting and are moved into the buffer silo of the pelleting press where they are compressed to firm pellets.
Pieces of iron are removed through a magnetic separation belt and neodymium magnets. The eddy current separator removes the residual NE material from the plastic. Pellets from the hammer mill can be separated into aluminium and copper.
The CRC/petane/air mixture from the shredder unit and pelleting press is cooled and frozen, and subsequently condensed and bottled.
One system can recycle up to 60 refrigerators per hour, the company says.
The monitoring system, which includes data loggers, is useful for continuous recording and supervision of the entire system.
Get curated news on YOUR industry.
Enter your email to receive our newsletters.
Latest from Recycling Today
- Interchange Recycling expands to Whitehorse with new site opening
- Casella Waste to promote president to CEO
- Midsummer sees flurry of scrap theft alerts
- Hydro Circal spurs US furniture making investment
- ArcelorMittal predicts active 2026 for Alabama mill
- North American recovered paper market softens this summer
- Defunct electronics recycling companies ordered to pay $3M for hazardous waste violations in Ohio
- Tacoma, Washington, launches smart camera technology pilot