ASTM International Standard Supports Brominated Flame Retardants in Plastics
“New standard will be a fundamental tool for assessing the potential exposure to brominated flame retardants during a product’s life cycle ...”
ASTM International, West Conshohoken, Penn., has developed a new standard--soon to be published as D8280--that reportedly will help determine whether certain flame retardants which have been shown to reduce the flammability of plastics used in consumer products, construction materials, cars, and more are retained within the plastic.
Brominated flame retardants are helpful in stopping combustible plastics from igniting when exposed to a fire threat. They also decrease the fire intensity if one occurs, according to Marcelo Hirschler, president of GBH International. Since 1995, GBH has been the exclusive North American agent for fire testing technology and is a leading global supplier of fire test instruments and fire testing services. Hirschler is a member of ASTM International’s plastics committee (D20), which developed the new standard.
Says Hirschler, “The new standard has tremendous importance for product designers, regulators, and supply chains to compare and chose safe, effective, and sustainable brominated flame retardants. The key issue is that when there is no ignition, there is no fire. The new standard will be a fundamental tool for assessing the potential exposure to brominated flame retardants during a product’s life cycle. It will help product designers quantify, compare, and communicate the sustainability of their choice of flame retardants.”
Hirschler notes that, by quantifying potential emissions from flame retardants and flame retarded products, the new standard directly relates to three of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals: #3 on good health and well-being; #11 on sustainable cities and communities; and #12 on responsible production and consumption.
Related Content
-
What to Look for in High-Speed Automation for Pipette Production
Automation is a must-have for molders of pipettes. Make sure your supplier provides assurances of throughput and output, manpower utilization, floor space consumption and payback period.
-
Medical Tubing: Use Simulation to Troubleshoot, Optimize Processing & Dies
Extrusion simulations can be useful in anticipating issues and running “what-if” scenarios to size extruders and design dies for extrusion projects. It should be used at early stages of any project to avoid trial and error and remaking tooling.
-
For Extrusion and Injection-Blow Molders, Numerous Upgrades in Machines and Services
Uniloy is revising its machinery lines across the board and strengthening after-sales services in tooling maintenance, spare parts and tech service.