Rutgers-led study shows the benefits of removing toner with pulses of intense xenon light
Imagine if your printer had an “unprint” button that used pulses of
light to remove toner, curbing environmental impacts compared with
conventional paper recycling.
A Rutgers-led team has created a
new way to unprint paper that, unlike laser-based methods, can work with
the standard, coated paper used in home and office printers. The new
method uses pulses of light from a xenon lamp, and can erase black,
blue, red and green toners without damaging the paper, according to a study in the Journal of Cleaner Production.
“Our method makes it possible to unprint and then reprint on the same paper at least five times, which is typically as many times paper can be reused with conventional recycling. By eliminating the steps involved in conventional recycling, our unprinting method could reduce energy costs, pollution and greenhouse gas emissions,” said study coauthor Rajiv Malhotra, an assistant professor in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering in the School of Engineering at Rutgers University–New Brunswick.
Conventional
recycling of coated paper is a major contributor to climate change
emissions, chemical pollution and energy use, according to the study.
Extending the life of paper while avoiding these recycling steps would
yield significant environmental benefits.
The engineers’ next
steps are to further refine the method by testing additional toner
colors on a wider range of paper types. Unprinting can be done with
simple equipment and a wipe with a very small amount of benign alcohol,
and the engineers are working to integrate unprinting with typical
office and home printers.
The study’s lead author is Michael
Dexter, a former Rutgers engineering doctoral student. Former
undergraduate engineering student Keri Rickman contributed to the study,
along with researchers at Oregon State University.
Conventional recycling of coated paper is a major contributor to climate change emissions, chemical pollution and energy use, according to the study. Extending the life of paper while avoiding these recycling steps would yield significant environmental benefits.
The engineers’ next steps are to further refine the method by testing additional toner colors on a wider range of paper types. Unprinting can be done with simple equipment and a wipe with a very small amount of benign alcohol, and the engineers are working to integrate unprinting with typical office and home printers.
The study’s lead author is Michael Dexter, a former Rutgers engineering doctoral student. Former undergraduate engineering student Keri Rickman contributed to the study, along with researchers at Oregon State University.