Authors
Paul Vanegas, Jef R Peeters, Dirk Cattrysse, Paolo Tecchio, Fulvio Ardente, Fabrice Mathieux, Wim Dewulf, Joost R Duflou
Publication date
2018/8/1
Journal
Resources, Conservation and Recycling
Volume
135
Pages
323-334
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Circular economy strategies encourage, among others, concrete actions to extend the product lifetime. Product’s repair and reuse, and component harvesting for reuse, all require the facilitated access to product components. Consequently, a reduction of the disassembly time and the related costs will increase the economic feasibility of product lifetime extension and therefore increase the viability of a circular economy in industrialised regions. Furthermore, disassembly has the potential to significantly increase the recycling yield and purity for precious metals, critical metals and plastics. For this reason, the European Commission and several ecolabels have considered to include design for disassembly requirements in legislation or voluntary environmental instruments. However, up to date, there is no standardised method to evaluate the ease of disassembly in an unambiguous manner with a good trade-off …
Total citations
20172018201920202021202220232024111354259596037
Scholar articles
P Vanegas, JR Peeters, D Cattrysse, P Tecchio… - Resources, Conservation and Recycling, 2018