The role of product design in advancing the circular economy of electric and electronic equipment

•Product design affects the circular economy of electric and electronic equipment.•A systematic literature review was conducted to study the status of the subject.•Issues with recyclability and disassemblability are common in the studied articles.•Conflicting needs between circular design goals were...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inResources, conservation & recycling advances Vol. 21; p. 200207
Main Authors Köpman, Juhoantti, Majava, Jukka
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 01.05.2024
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ISSN2667-3789
2667-3789
DOI10.1016/j.rcradv.2024.200207

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Summary:•Product design affects the circular economy of electric and electronic equipment.•A systematic literature review was conducted to study the status of the subject.•Issues with recyclability and disassemblability are common in the studied articles.•Conflicting needs between circular design goals were discovered.•The minimum entropy model is introduced for circular product design. Circular economy (CE) processes, such as reuse, remanufacturing, and recycling, play a significant role in reducing the environmental impacts of modern manufacturing industries. However, electric and electronic equipment (EEE) is still often designed to function for a short usable life after which it is discarded. Furthermore, the current relatively low price and high availability of virgin raw materials, compared to those of recycled materials, decrease the financial viability of recycling. This study conducts a systematic literature review on product design-related issues in the CE of EEE and induces a novel model of product design considerations for the CE of EEE. The aim is to identify design traits that are hindering the CE of EEE and what measures can be taken in the product development phase to create EEE compatible with CE. This study points out general issues in the disassemblability and recyclability of EEE, as well as a recurring theme of conflicting design needs between different CE processes. Furthermore, the minimum entropy product design priority model is introduced as the novel contribution of this study to highlight the dependency between technological maturity, expected product lifespan, and suitable CE processes.
ISSN:2667-3789
2667-3789
DOI:10.1016/j.rcradv.2024.200207