Thermal Depolymerization of Scrap Tires Into Liquid Fuels: Upgradation and Utilization In Diesel Engine
Date
2022
Authors
Mohan, Akhil
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
Conversion of scrap tire into fuel oils has attracted commercial attention since revenue can be
generated from inexpensive and abundant feedstock while easing waste management issues.
Globally, 1.5 billion scrap tires are generated every year. Environmental accumulation of tire
waste is a global problem, and one way to control the problem is to convert them into fuels and
specialty chemicals. There are various approaches for recycling scrap tires, such as re-treading,
reclaiming useful products for playgrounds, open incineration, pyrolysis, gasification, and
illegal dumping. Illegal dumping often provides a site for breeding mosquitoes, rodents, and
larvae formation. Open burning releases a thick black plume of smoke with 1,3-butadiene,
nitrogen, carbon, and sulfur oxides with the release of hazardous polyaromatic hydrocarbons.
Out of the approaches mentioned above to recycle tires, pyrolysis is an interesting energy
recovery process due to the formation of solid (carbon black) and steel wires (in the case of the
tire), pyro-gas, along oil products. Production of crude tire pyrolysis oil from scrap tires is a
promising approach by thermal depolymerization at an oxygen starved atmosphere and a
temperature of 400-600 oC.
The primary objective of present study is to refine CTPO by the principle of selective
adsorption and preferential solubility using cost-effective adsorbent and solvent and utilization
as a fuel in a single-cylinder diesel engine. A field study was conducted in a 10-ton rotating
autoclave reactor to optimize scrap tire pyrolysis parameters (400 oC, 10 oC/min, 0.2 bar, 4
rpm), and investigate the existing problems in the industry with a special focus on applying
CTPO in diesel engines. Crude tire pyrolysis oil (CTPO) is a dark brown to black colored syrupy
liquid with C6-C24 organic compounds with various classes such as paraffin, olefins, terpenes,
aromatics, nitrogen, and sulfur-containing compounds, oxygen-containing compounds. The major
challenge for utilizing CTPO in engine or furnace is the inferior fuel properties such as low
heat content, low flash point, high acidity, low cetane index, creaming or phase separation in
storage tanks, pungent smell due to the presence of dibenzothiophenes and mercaptans.
However, thermal distillation is widely used as an upgradation technology implemented in
most of the small scale tire pyrolysis units. Distillation needs huge capital investment and
energy, making the process less attractive and unsuitable for the long-term run.
In the present study, a straightforward, robust, inexpensive, and scalable up-gradation strategy
for refining CTPO by preferential solubility and selective adsorption to utilize single-cylinder
direct-injected stationary engines is formulated. A limited study has been attempted for the up-
gradation of CTPO using adsorbents and solvents. The present study also envisages extensive
characterization of CTPO, StTPO and diesel to comprehend the fuel chemistry in terms of
physical, thermal, and chemical analysis through various analytical techniques. GC×GC TOF-
MS analysis showed that sulfur, benzene derivatives, naphthalene’s and polyaromatic
hydrocarbons were lowered by 48.86%, 25.68%, 43.69%, and 27.79%, respectively. The batch
scale process's oil yield is improved by 95% compared to the laboratory scale upgradation
strategy. Experimental results found that StTPO40 is a binary optimal blend in terms of
performance, combustion, and emissions. The emissions from StTPOxx were significantly
improved after upgradation by silica gel as adsorbent and petroleum ether as a diluent.
Furthermore, ethyl levulinate, a potential bio-diluent with high oxygenate, was also utilized as
an additive to StTPOxx blends to scrutinize performance, combustion, and emissions of single-
cylinder, direct-injected stationary diesel engine, which is another novelty of the present study.
The emission components are significantly dropped down after the upgradation of CTPO, but
the performance was slightly lowered after the refining process. The nitrous oxide emission
from StTPO40 and StTPO40EL10 was significantly reduced by 43.09% and 44.54%,
respectively. Heat release from StTPOxx and StTPOxxEL10 were higher than diesel due to the
high amount of polyaromatics hydrocarbons, naphthalenes, and benzene derivatives.
StTPO40EL10 is a ternary optimal blend in terms of performance, combustion, and emission,
with EL as a potential diesel additive.
It can be concluded that the StTPOxx and StTPOxxEL10 can be fully utilized in a diesel engine
without any modifications and operational failures. In short, the lower blend percentage of
StTPO40EL10 and StTPO40 can be used as an alternative fuel for a single-cylinder direct-
injected diesel engine. In contrast, the higher blend percentage (StTPO60EL10, StTPO80EL10,
StTPO90EL10, StTPO60, StTPO80, and StTPO100) can be utilized in boilers, furnaces,
burners and marine engines.
Description
Keywords
Upgradation, Performance, Combustion, Emissions