TY - JOUR
T1 - The circular economy potential of reversible bonding in smartphones
AU - Parchomenko, Alexej
AU - De Smet, Stefanie
AU - Pals, Emma
AU - Vanderreydt, Ive
AU - Van Opstal, Wim
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors would like to acknowledge financial support through the VLAIO Collectief Onderzoek & Ontwikkeling en Collectieve Kennisverspreiding (COOCK) Circular Bonding project (Grant ID HBC.2020.2584 ). The authors would like to thank our project partners, Isabel Van de Weyenberg (Flanders Make) and Ahmed Elmahdy (Flanders Make) for demonstrating the functioning of reversible bonding techniques in their lab and providing an introduction on the mechanisms of reversible bonding techniques. Further, in the context of the Post-Doc project of the corresponding author, we thank Karl C. Vrancken for the organizational support and VITO for funding of the respective Post-Doc project.
PY - 2023/10
Y1 - 2023/10
N2 - The increased use of adhesive bonding in manufacturing is an important barrier to implement circular economy strategies, including repair, refurbishment, and high-quality recycling. The circular economy potential of reversible adhesives that are debondable on demand, however, remains largely unexplored. In this paper we apply an integrated technology-agnostic framework to smartphones to identify and quantify the circular economy potential of reversible bonding. In this framework we combine insights from Life Cycle Assessment, Life Cycle Costing, and Statistical Entropy Analysis. We find that reversible bonding of smartphones can be an enabler for circular strategies and have a considerable positive impact on preserving higher functionality on a product, component, and material level. The major added value of reversible bonding is its potential to replace and update parts, retaining the main environmental hotspot of a smartphone. Firms, however, will not likely switch to this technology, even though bonding and debonding make up only a small fraction of total lifecycle costs. Therefore, policy recommendations include mandatory policies on repairability and public procurement favouring the use of reversible bonding techniques. This would alter incentives in contexts where consumer preferences for lease markets cannot be taken for granted. The evaluation of different debonding scenarios from three distinct perspectives provides a comprehensive, more reliable, and robust understanding of the trade-offs related to debonding and its potential contribution to the circular economy.
AB - The increased use of adhesive bonding in manufacturing is an important barrier to implement circular economy strategies, including repair, refurbishment, and high-quality recycling. The circular economy potential of reversible adhesives that are debondable on demand, however, remains largely unexplored. In this paper we apply an integrated technology-agnostic framework to smartphones to identify and quantify the circular economy potential of reversible bonding. In this framework we combine insights from Life Cycle Assessment, Life Cycle Costing, and Statistical Entropy Analysis. We find that reversible bonding of smartphones can be an enabler for circular strategies and have a considerable positive impact on preserving higher functionality on a product, component, and material level. The major added value of reversible bonding is its potential to replace and update parts, retaining the main environmental hotspot of a smartphone. Firms, however, will not likely switch to this technology, even though bonding and debonding make up only a small fraction of total lifecycle costs. Therefore, policy recommendations include mandatory policies on repairability and public procurement favouring the use of reversible bonding techniques. This would alter incentives in contexts where consumer preferences for lease markets cannot be taken for granted. The evaluation of different debonding scenarios from three distinct perspectives provides a comprehensive, more reliable, and robust understanding of the trade-offs related to debonding and its potential contribution to the circular economy.
KW - Circular business models
KW - Circular economy
KW - Life cycle assessment
KW - Life cycle costing
KW - Reversible bonding
KW - Statistical entropy analysis
U2 - 10.1016/j.spc.2023.08.017
DO - 10.1016/j.spc.2023.08.017
M3 - Article
SN - 2352-5509
VL - 41
SP - 362
EP - 378
JO - Sustainable Production and Consumption
JF - Sustainable Production and Consumption
ER -