Plastics Lifecycle | Chapter 1 – What is plastic?

27 March 2019

Historical Evolution of Plastics

A Little History

The history of manufactured plastics goes back more than 100 years. Their usage over the past century has enabled society to make huge technological advances. Although plastics are thought of as a modern invention, there have always been “natural polymers” such as amber, tortoise shells and animal horns. These materials behaved very much like today’s manufactured plastics and were often used similarly to the way manufactured plastics are currently applied. For example, before the sixteenth century, animal horns, which become transparent and pale yellow when heated, were sometimes used to replace glass.

Landmark Discoveries

Post-World War Developments

Plastics did not really take off until after the First World War with the use of petroleum, a substance easier to process than coal into raw materials. Plastics served as substitutes for wood, glass and metal during the hardship times of World Wars I & II. After World War II, newer plastics, such as polyurethane, polyester, silicones, polypropylene, and polycarbonate joined polymethyl methacrylate, polystyrene and PVC in widespread applications. Many more would follow, and by the 1960s plastics were within everyone’s reach due to their inexpensive cost. Plastics had thus come to be considered ‘common’—a symbol of the consumer society.

Contemporary Advancements

Since the 1970s, we have witnessed the advent of ‘high-tech’ plastics used in demanding fields such as health and technology. New types and forms of plastics with new or improved performance characteristics continue to be developed.


Versatility and Applications of Plastics

From daily tasks to our most unusual needs, plastics have increasingly provided the performance characteristics that fulfil consumer needs at all levels. Plastics are used in such a wide range of applications because they are uniquely capable of offering many different properties that offer consumer benefits unsurpassed by other materials. They are also unique in that their properties may be customised for each end-use application.

https://plastics.americanchemistry.com/Lifecycle-of-a-Plastic-Product/

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