In the field of Post-Consumer Recycling (PCR), pelletizing PP/PE woven bags, jumbo bags, and raffia materials has long been recognized as a technical challenge. These materials are characterized by extremely low bulk density, irregular shapes, and a tendency to entangle. The most common pain points in twin screw extruder operations are "bridging" at the feed throat or "clogging" within the screw flights, leading to output fluctuations or total downtime. The key to solving this lies in optimizing the feed zone geometry for lightweight materials.
Once shredded, woven bags become thin, lightweight flakes or fibers.
To enhance the processing efficiency of lightweight woven bag scraps, the screw and barrel configuration must be specifically selected:
Recycled materials often contain residual sand or inks, requiring high hardware durability:
In woven bag recycling, simply increasing the screw speed is not a sustainable solution. By selecting high-precision components with large-pitch designs, high torque capacity, and precision clearance, manufacturers can increase effective output by over 30%. For recycling plants aiming for stable operations, premium custom feeding components compatible with Coperion or Erema standards are the core guarantee for reducing manual intervention and boosting profit margins.