4.7 Review

Eco-Friendly Electronics-A Comprehensive Review

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS TECHNOLOGIES
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/admt.202001263

Keywords

eco‐ friendly electronics; end‐ of‐ life; green electronics; green manufacturing; ICT sustainability; recycling; sustainable materials

Funding

  1. CAPES (Brazil)
  2. CNPq (Brazil)
  3. FINEP (Brazil)
  4. FAPERGS (Brazil)
  5. Australian Government through the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA)

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This comprehensive review defines eco-friendly electronics, discusses the trend of introducing eco-friendly technologies and materials to replace established ones, and highlights the challenge of matching performance and stability of existing materials and technologies. The new implementations can have detrimental or beneficial net impacts on the environment.
Eco-friendliness is becoming an indispensable feature for electrical and electronic equipment to thrive in the competitive market. This comprehensive review is the first to define eco-friendly electronics in its multiple meanings: power saving devices, end-of-life impact attenuators, equipment whose manufacturing uses green processing, electronics that use materials that minimize environmental and health risks, designs that improve lifespan, reparability, etc. More specifically, this review discusses eco-friendly technologies and materials that are being introduced to replace the well-established ones. This is done for all material classes (metals, polymers, ceramics, and composites). Manufacturing, recycling, and final product characteristics are discussed in their various interconnected aspects. Additionally, the concept of consciously planned obsolescence is introduced to address the paradoxical relationship between durability and efficiency. The overall conclusions are that there is an important global trend to make electronics more eco-friendly. However, matching the performance and stability of well-established materials and technologies seems to be the main barrier to achieve it. These new implementations can have detrimental or beneficial net impacts on the environment. Assessing their net outcome is challenging because their impacts are frequently unknown and the current evaluation methods (and tools) are incapable of comprehensively quantifying these impacts and generating reliable verdicts.

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