Plastic Fuel Conversion and Characterisation: A Waste Valorization Potential for Ghana

Abstract

Plastics generally play a very important role in a plethora of industries, fields, and our everyday lives. Despite their cheapness, availability, and important contributions to lives, they, however, pose a serious threat to the environment due to their mostly non-biodegradable nature. Recycling into useful products can reduce the amount of plastic waste. Thermal degradation (Pyrolysis) of plastics is becoming an increasingly important recycling method for the conversion of plastic materials into valuable chemicals and oil products. In this work, waste Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) water bottles were thermally converted into useful gaseous and liquid products. A simple pyrolysis reactor system has been used for the conversions with a liquid product yield of 65 % at a temperature range of 400°C to 550°C. The chemical analysis of the pyrolytic oil showed the presence of functional groups such as alkanes, alkenes, alcohols, ethers, carboxylic acids, esters, and phenyl ring substitution bands. The main constituents were 1-Tetradecene, 1- Pentadecene, Cetene, Hexadecane, 1-Heptadecene, Heptadecane, Octadecane, Nonadecane, Eicosane, Tetratetracontane, 1-Undecene, 1-Decene). The results are promising and can be maximized by additional techniques such as hydrogenation and hydrodeoxygenation to obtain value-added products.

Description

Research Article

Keywords

Plastic Fuel, Ghana, Waste Valorization

Citation

Michael Commeh, David Dodoo-Arhin, Edward Acquaye, Isaiah Nimako Baah, Nene Kwabla Amoatey, et al.. Plastic Fuel Conversion and Characterisation: A Waste Valorization Potential for Ghana. MRS Advances, 2020, 5 (26), pp.1349-1356. ff10.1557/adv.2020.127ff. ffhal-02496600

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