Composites One
Published

Polymer Resources completes resin compounding facility expansion

A 40% capacity increase for high-quality engineered resins compounding — available unfilled and with fiber reinforcement — and expanded plastic recycling at the Rochester, New York facility address customer needs for enhanced supply and sustainability.

Share

Polymer Resources’ updated Rochester, New York, facility features increased grinding and shredding capacity for recycling plastic waste to support circularity and sustainability. Photo Credit: Polymer Resources Ltd.

Polymer Resources Ltd. (Farmington, Conn., U.S.), a U.S. compounder of high-quality engineering resins, has completed the expansion and enhancement of its compounding facility in Rochester, New York. 

To meet customers’ growing needs for top-quality engineering resins, the company has significantly upgraded an existing building on its campus to support a 40% increase in overall compounding capacity. The updated facility also features increased grinding and shredding capacity for recycling plastic waste to support circularity and sustainability. Its spacious floorplan, new safety features and amenities are also designed to provide a comfortable and efficient work environment for employees, whose numbers are expected to increase by double digits in the coming years.

The Rochester plant compounds a wide range of engineering resins, from polyphenylene ether and polystyrene blends (PPX) to various grades of polycarbonate (PC), acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS), polybutylene terephthalate (PBT), PC/ABS and PBT blends. Many of these grades are available unfilled or with different loadings of mineral or glass fiber reinforcement.

The facility supplies large amounts of material, including full and partial truckloads (LTL volumes) to customers developing important applications for a variety of industries including the electrical, industrial, non-invasive medical, consumer goods, transportation, and building and construction sectors.

The Rochester site offers Polymer Resources an opportunity to add on to the building — up to a total of 100,000 square feet — in the future.

“The expansion of our Rochester facility is strategic to the robust growth of our compounding capabilities and the expansion of our sustainability initiatives, both of which are increasingly important to customers,” Scott Anderson, president and chief operating officer, Polymer Resources, says. “In addition to continuing to address customer requirements for scalable, reliable resin supply, short lead times and exceptional quality, the updated facility will help us advance sustainability through plastic waste collection and recycling. We are committed to helping our customers reach their production and sustainability goals, as well as meeting our own sustainability goals, and this new facility positions us to achieve those objectives.”

The project, which was completed in just over a year, expanded the footprint of the compounding facility from a total of 35,000 square feet, previously divided between two buildings, to 60,000 square feet in one building. This change offers far more space for compounding and grinding operations, storage, a laboratory and offices, and it improves process efficiency and streamlines workflow. Further, the Rochester site offers Polymer Resources an opportunity to add on to the building — up to a total of 100,000 square feet — in the future.

To boost compounding capacity, the company has installed a new production line with a twin-screw extruder for faster throughput and advanced capabilities. This new equipment reportedly increases capacity by 40% and helps enable the efficient production of new and existing products.

A key feature of the facility is a separate, soundproofed, 3,250-square-foot room for grinding and shredding post-industrial and post-consumer plastic waste for use in Polymer Resources’ sustainable resin grades. Not only does this grinding operation use material from both Rochester and Farmington sites, but it also accepts parts and waste material from customers and vendors for recycling. Several end-use agreements between Polymer Resources and its customers are in place to ensure known, reliable sources of recycled content for the company’s sustainable materials portfolio.

To maximize employee safety and comfort, Polymer Resources designed the facility with a powerful air filtration system, a dust collection system for the grinding operation and a modern break room. Greater space between machines also improves workers’ physical safety as they move around the production floor.

Toray Advanced Composites
Composites One
Harper International Carbon Fiber
Adhesives for Composite Materials
Custom Quantity Composite Repair Materials
BARRDAY PREPREG
HEATCON Composite Systems
NewStar Adhesives - Nautical Adhesives
Carbon Fiber 2024
Advert for lightweight carrier veils used in aero
CompositesWorld
Composites product design

Read Next

Carbon Fibers

Plant tour: Teijin Carbon America Inc., Greenwood, S.C., U.S.

In 2018, Teijin broke ground on a facility that is reportedly the largest capacity carbon fiber line currently in existence. The line has been fully functional for nearly two years and has plenty of room for expansion.

Read More
Aerospace

The next-generation single-aisle: Implications for the composites industry

While the world continues to wait for new single-aisle program announcements from Airbus and Boeing, it’s clear composites will play a role in their fabrication. But in what ways, and what capacity?

Read More
Aerospace

“Structured air” TPS safeguards composite structures

Powered by an 85% air/15% pure polyimide aerogel, Blueshift’s novel material system protects structures during transient thermal events from -200°C to beyond 2400°C for rockets, battery boxes and more.

Read More
Ready-to-Ship Composites