NIR Sortable Dark Colorants Get Green Light from APR
Avient’s OnColor NIR line are preferred for HDPE in black and dark colors and similar recognition is being sought for PP.

A relatively new line of near-infrared (NIR) sortable dark colorants from Avient Corp. has been recognized by the Association of Plastics Recyclers (APR) under its Meets Preferred Guidance (MPG) program. With this recognition, the OnColor NIR Sortable Colorants are preferred for HDPE resin in black and dark colors, according to the APR Design Guide for Plastics Recyclability. In addition, testing is underway to support an application for MPG recognition for the same colorants for PP resins. APR’s MPG program helps brand owners be more confident that the materials they incorporate into their products support recyclability.
Dark packaging, traditionally using colorants containing carbon black, is a popular choice for brand owners. It is well known that detecting and sorting dark packaging in material recovery facilities is challenging. OnColor NIR Sortable Colorants from Avient provide a solution to this problem, allowing the packaging to be visible to a NIR optical sorter, enabling it to sort into the correct plastic stream.
Said Mayendran Pillay, director of marketing for Avient’s Color & Additives, “As a leader in sustainable colorant and additive solutions for polymers, we are proud to have received this recognition from the Association of Plastics Recyclers and look forward to further supporting our customers to reach their recycling goals. Avient is committed to enabling 100% of our products manufactured for packaging applications to be recyclable, reusable, or compostable by 2030. This solution aligns with that commitment.”
Related Content
-
Advanced Biobased Materials Company PlantSwitch Gets Support for Commercialization
With participation from venture investment firm NexPoint Capital, PlantSwitch closes it $8M bridge financing round.
-
Let's Take a Journey into the World of Molding Thermosets – Part 1
There are many fundamental differences between thermosets and thermoplastics, from the way raw materials are furnished to the molder and the process in which parts are molded.
-
Polymer Science for Those Who Work With Plastics: Why Entanglements — Not Just Molecular Weight — Drive Plastic Performance
Ever try running your fingers through tangled hair? Yeah … that’s not fun, but that’s what happens at the molecular level when polymer chains reach the right length. They wrap around each other, intertwine and … get stuck — and those tangles are the real reason plastics perform the way they do.