Technical aspects of marine plastic litter treatment by pyrolysis, for material and energy recovery

Marine plastic pollution is a serious problem the world is currently facing. Due to the long exposure to the marine environment and contamination from salts and microorganisms, the properties of marine plastic litter would potentially differ from conventional plastic waste. This could affect the do...

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Main Author: Wu, Xinyi
Other Authors: Grzegorz Lisak
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/138709
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1387092020-05-12T03:24:12Z Technical aspects of marine plastic litter treatment by pyrolysis, for material and energy recovery Wu, Xinyi Grzegorz Lisak School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Residues and Resource Reclamation Centre g.lisak@ntu.edu.sg Engineering::Environmental engineering Marine plastic pollution is a serious problem the world is currently facing. Due to the long exposure to the marine environment and contamination from salts and microorganisms, the properties of marine plastic litter would potentially differ from conventional plastic waste. This could affect the downstream treatment of marine plastic waste. Pyrolysis is a recycling technique often adopted in the treatment of plastic wastes, converting plastic into coke, oil and gas that can be reused as fuel or intermediates for manufacturing. Catalytic chemical vapour deposition (CCVD) is one method that has been widely researched for the up-cycling of plastic pyrolysis products into valuable carbon nanomaterials. Hence, this study investigated: 1) technical aspect of marine plastic recovery in terms of energy and material recovery and 2) the feasibility of using non-condensable gas from marine plastic litter pyrolysis for up-cycling into carbon nanotubes (CNTs). Marine plastic litter obtained from 2 sources were sorted and divided into ‘washed’ and ‘raw’ samples. The samples were characterised for ion chromatography, ash content and calorimetry prior to pyrolysis. Pyrolysis was conducted at 600℃ and non-condensable gases were passed through Ni-Ca catalyst at 600℃ for one hour during CCVD for CNT synthesis. Analysis of pyrolysis oils revealed its potential to be recovered as fuels due to the high proportion of short chain hydrocarbons. The presence of large fractions of ethylene, propylene, C4 and C5 hydrocarbons suggested the ability of non-condensable pyrolysis gas to be converted into CNTs via CCVD. The formation of CNTs affirmed the feasibility of using pyrolysis gas from using marine plastic waste as feedstock. Bachelor of Engineering (Environmental Engineering) 2020-05-12T03:24:12Z 2020-05-12T03:24:12Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/138709 en EN-11 application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Environmental engineering
spellingShingle Engineering::Environmental engineering
Wu, Xinyi
Technical aspects of marine plastic litter treatment by pyrolysis, for material and energy recovery
description Marine plastic pollution is a serious problem the world is currently facing. Due to the long exposure to the marine environment and contamination from salts and microorganisms, the properties of marine plastic litter would potentially differ from conventional plastic waste. This could affect the downstream treatment of marine plastic waste. Pyrolysis is a recycling technique often adopted in the treatment of plastic wastes, converting plastic into coke, oil and gas that can be reused as fuel or intermediates for manufacturing. Catalytic chemical vapour deposition (CCVD) is one method that has been widely researched for the up-cycling of plastic pyrolysis products into valuable carbon nanomaterials. Hence, this study investigated: 1) technical aspect of marine plastic recovery in terms of energy and material recovery and 2) the feasibility of using non-condensable gas from marine plastic litter pyrolysis for up-cycling into carbon nanotubes (CNTs). Marine plastic litter obtained from 2 sources were sorted and divided into ‘washed’ and ‘raw’ samples. The samples were characterised for ion chromatography, ash content and calorimetry prior to pyrolysis. Pyrolysis was conducted at 600℃ and non-condensable gases were passed through Ni-Ca catalyst at 600℃ for one hour during CCVD for CNT synthesis. Analysis of pyrolysis oils revealed its potential to be recovered as fuels due to the high proportion of short chain hydrocarbons. The presence of large fractions of ethylene, propylene, C4 and C5 hydrocarbons suggested the ability of non-condensable pyrolysis gas to be converted into CNTs via CCVD. The formation of CNTs affirmed the feasibility of using pyrolysis gas from using marine plastic waste as feedstock.
author2 Grzegorz Lisak
author_facet Grzegorz Lisak
Wu, Xinyi
format Final Year Project
author Wu, Xinyi
author_sort Wu, Xinyi
title Technical aspects of marine plastic litter treatment by pyrolysis, for material and energy recovery
title_short Technical aspects of marine plastic litter treatment by pyrolysis, for material and energy recovery
title_full Technical aspects of marine plastic litter treatment by pyrolysis, for material and energy recovery
title_fullStr Technical aspects of marine plastic litter treatment by pyrolysis, for material and energy recovery
title_full_unstemmed Technical aspects of marine plastic litter treatment by pyrolysis, for material and energy recovery
title_sort technical aspects of marine plastic litter treatment by pyrolysis, for material and energy recovery
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/138709
_version_ 1681059603398262784