Circular Composites by Design

Testing a Design Method in Industry

Journal Article (2022)
Author(s)

J.J. Joustra (TU Delft - Circular Product Design)

CA Bakker (TU Delft - Circular Product Design)

Riel Bessai (TU Delft - Design for Sustainability)

R. Balkenende (TU Delft - Circular Product Design)

Research Group
Circular Product Design
Copyright
© 2022 J.J. Joustra, C.A. Bakker, R. Bessai, R. Balkenende
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.3390/su14137993
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 J.J. Joustra, C.A. Bakker, R. Bessai, R. Balkenende
Research Group
Circular Product Design
Issue number
13
Volume number
14
Pages (from-to)
1-17
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

The design of composite products for a circular economy is challenging. Materials such as glass-fibre-reinforced plastics have long product lifetimes but are hard to recycle. For the effective reuse and recycling of products, parts, and materials, recovery strategies must be selected and implemented in the product design stage. This extends the scope and complexity of the design process and requires additional skills from the designers. We developed a novel circular composites design method for products containing composite materials to support designers and improve product circularity. This method, which is the first of its kind to address the circular design of composite products, helps designers explore recovery pathways and generate design solutions. In this study, we evaluated the method’s effectiveness, accessibility, and usability in design practice. We tested the method with five design case studies in the construction, furniture, and automotive industries. The method was used to generate, evaluate, communicate, and detail product designs. We found that two of the five cases used the method to develop circular product concepts. In the other three cases, recycling rather than product-level recovery strategies was the result, with a focus on improving the material formulations instead of the overall product design. Although the designers considered the method accessible and usable, its effectiveness was restricted by the existing business, logistics, reprocessing technology, and policy contexts. These factors are intertwined and partly dictate the boundary conditions of the design, which means that to successfully implement the proposed method, the transition to a circular economy requires a holistic approach to adjust the design process, organisations, and value chains.