Abstract

Literature lacks data on the performance of waste plastics in controlling NOx emissions in practical combustors operating typically in the temperature window of 1000–1200 °C, under a range of fuel-oxygen equivalence ratios, preventing recycling of plastics in this application. In this contribution, we demonstrate that waste plastics, in particular polyethylene, can serve as a reburning fuel for converting nitrogen oxides (NOx) into environmentally-benign combustion products, in practical large-scale combustors such as pulverised coal power plant, circulation fluidised bed combustion plant, entrained flow boilers, and incinerators. The experiments involved a high-temperature vertically-entrained reactor operating in the range of 600–1200 °C, in conjunction with online infrared spectroscopy, chemiluminescence and gas chromatography. Chemical kinetic modelling, supported by DFT calculations with DMol3 package revealed the underlying chemistry of the NOx mitigation reactions, especially the importance of C2H5 and C2H3 radicals. We modelled the process kinetically and performed a techno-economic assessment of the new technology, to prove its financial feasibility. The reaction of pyrolytic fragments with NOx yields excellent removal efficiency of nitrogen oxides of up to 82% and selectivity to N2 up to 85%, within the temperature range of 1000 °C–1200 °C, and fuel-oxygen equivalent ratios of Φ = 0.8–1.2. While we observed the formation of HCN, the overall nitrogen selectivity shifts towards the formation of N2. Both the conversion of NOx and the selectivity to N2 can be improved further by increasing the residence time. The economic assessment indicates that, the use of waste plastics is comparable to other mainstream solid fuels and becomes less expensive when considering renewable benefits.

Highlights

  • Persistent global accumulation of polymeric materials infers that millions of metric tonnes of waste plastic could litter the environment and oceans by 2030 [1]

  • In addition to the viable energy resource of polymer solid waste (PSW), the hydrocarbon-rich fragments of some plastics should further serve in mitigating atmospheric pollution from stationary combustion plants

  • This kind of system could be termed as nitrogen oxides (NOx) control through plastic waste reburning

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Summary

Introduction

Persistent global accumulation of polymeric materials infers that millions of metric tonnes of waste plastic could litter the environment and oceans by 2030 [1]. In addition to the viable energy resource of polymer solid waste (PSW), the hydrocarbon-rich fragments of some plastics should further serve in mitigating atmospheric pollution (ni­ trogen oxides, NOx) from stationary combustion plants. This kind of system could be termed as NOx control through plastic waste reburning. The paper covers the techno-economic analysis of the new technology to compare the cost of employing waste PE as a reburning fuel with that of conventional fuels, to demonstrate its financial viability

Sample and characterisation
Experimental methods
Theoretical calculation and kinetic modelling
Energy implication of waste PE as reburning fuel
Reaction chemistry and efficiency of NOx conversion
Product N-selectivity
Relative techno-economic analysis
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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