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Valorizing plastic toy wastes to flammable gases through CO2-mediated pyrolysis with a Co-based catalyst

Authors
Jung, SungyupKim, Jung-HunTsang, Yiu FaiSong, HocheolKwon, Eilhann E.
Issue Date
Jul-2022
Publisher
Elsevier B.V.
Keywords
Circular economy; Waste-to-energy; Plastic management; Syngas; ABS plastic; Polymethyl methacrylate
Citation
Journal of Hazardous Materials, v.434, pp.1 - 12
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Journal of Hazardous Materials
Volume
434
Start Page
1
End Page
12
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/170053
DOI
10.1016/j.jhazmat.2022.128850
ISSN
0304-3894
Abstract
Toys are discarded due to their short life cycle. Unfortunately, development of sustainable disposal platform for toy has not gained particular concern. To establish a reliable disposal platform, this study employed a pyrolysis platform to valorize plastics into value-added fuels. To confer more environmentally resilient process, CO2 was used as a feedstock to enhance the process efficiency from a perspective of the yield of flammable gases. To this end, waste toy brick (WTB) was used as a model compound. The exact types of plastics (polyacrylonitrile, polybutadiene, polystyrene, and polymethyl methacrylate) in WTB were experimentally determined. In pyrolysis of WTB, the complicated mixture of benzene derivatives was inevitably generated. To detoxify them by means of syngas (H2/CO) production, catalytic pyrolysis was performed. Co catalyst effectively induced chemical bond scissions, leading to substantially enhanced H2 formation. Also, the gas phase reactions (GPRs) between CO2 and volatile compounds over Co catalyst expedited the production rate of CO, and such CO enhancement effectively offered a chance to mitigate toxic chemical generations. The synergistic contribution of CO2 and Co catalyst enhanced syngas formation more than 25 times in reference to pyrolysis of WTB without Co catalyst. The GPRs also greatly prevented catalyst deactivation.
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Kwon, Eilhann E.
COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING (DEPARTMENT OF EARTH RESOURCES AND ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING)
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