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Regranulated

Regranulated refers to plastic or other polymer material that has been processed through regranulation, a recycling step in which post-consumer or post-industrial waste is ground or shredded, melted, filtered, and pelletized into granules suitable for melt processing and reuse. The term is most commonly used with plastics, including PET, HDPE, LDPE, PP, and PS, but can apply to other polymers that are recycled into pellet form.

Regranulate is typically differentiated from virgin polymer by its origin and composition. It may contain residual

The regranulation process involves collection of recyclables, sorting by polymer type and sometimes color, cleaning to

Applications of regranulated material range from packaging and consumer goods to automotive components, depending on polymer

contaminants,
colorants,
or
additives
from
its
previous
use,
and
its
properties
can
vary
between
batches.
To
improve
performance,
manufacturers
may
employ
purification
steps
such
as
washing,
drying,
filtration,
and
decontamination
during
processing.
Some
regranulates
are
blended
with
virgin
material
to
meet
specification
requirements.
remove
labels
and
contaminants,
size
reduction,
extrusion
to
melt
the
material,
filtration
to
remove
impurities,
and
pelletizing
to
form
reusable
granules.
Moisture
control
is
important,
as
moisture
can
degrade
certain
polymers
during
processing.
Quality
control
often
assesses
melt
flow
rate,
ash
content,
color
stability,
odor,
and
mechanical
properties
to
ensure
suitability
for
intended
applications.
type
and
quality.
Food-contact
use
is
subject
to
regulatory
approval
and
contamination
controls.
Economically,
regranulate
can
reduce
material
costs
and
conserve
resources,
though
price
and
performance
depend
on
feedstock
quality
and
processing
efficiency.