Recycling is finding new uses for materials that would normally be considered waste. Such as aluminum cans, glass bottles, plastic containers, paper, cardboard etc.
This web site will provide information on how to live a more sustainable life at Colorado College through recycling.
The process of making aluminum from scratch involves mining. The aluminum or, called bauxite, is commonly found in tropical and semi tropical climates. The mined bauxite is then taken to a refinery where the alumina is extracted from the bauxite through the Bayer process. The end result is red mud that contains all of the other substances in bauxite, like iron, silicon and titanium, and a white powder: the alumina. This alumina is then converted into molten aluminum through the smelting process. This involves reducing the alumina in an electrolytic cell, using coke and pitch anodes and graphite cathodes. Finally, the molten aluminum is stored in a holding furnace and it is then processed into consumer and industrial products.
This picture from http://www.world-aluminum.org/ illustrates the process of making aluminum from scratch.
Recycling aluminum only involves the processes of being heated in the furnace then processed into materials that can be reused.
The process for making glass from scratch involves collecting sand and, after refining the sand, placing the sand in a furnace where the sand is fussed, producing molten glass. From there the glass is boiled down, skimmed and cooled, at this stage the glass is called "metal." The metal is then ladled or poured into molds and pressed, or is blown (sometimes into molds), or is drawn.The shaped glass is annealed to relieve stresses caused by manipulation, then is slowly cooled. The glass, formerly annealed on shelves in a melting furnace, is now usually carried on rollers through annealing ovens (lehrs).
The process for recycling glass is the same as it is for making glass, the only difference is that the recycled glass does not involve sand. Instead the used glass is re-melted, and reformed.
Here are some useful web sites that also have information on
The State of the Environment at Colorado College
The International Aluminum Institute
How is your state doing on recycling?
What are other colleges doing?
The University of Colorado in Boulder
A Site that has links to other college web sites.
References:
http://www.deq.state.or.us/wmc/solwaste/rethinkrecyc/4-5/RR4-515.pdf
http://www.colorado.edu/recycling/recycling_facts/
http://www.renton.wednet.edu/conservation/recycling_facts.htm
http://www3.niu.edu/recycling/alum_facts/page3.html