Publication | Open Access
Alternative Diesel from Waste Plastics
86
Citations
17
References
2017
Year
Chemical EngineeringNuclear Waste ManagementEngineeringPlastic RecyclingEnvironmental EngineeringCombustion ScienceFuture FuelPetroleum ProductionAlternative DieselPlastic WasteFuel ScienceRecyclingLong Term AmbitionFuel ProductionAutomotive Diesel FuelWaste ManagementRefuse-derived FuelGas Production
The long term ambition of energy security and solidarity, coupled with the environmental concerns of problematic waste accumulation, is addressed via the proposed waste-to-fuel technology. Plastic waste is converted into automotive diesel fuel via a two-step thermochemical process based on pyrolysis and hydrotreatment. Plastic waste was pyrolyzed in a South East Asia plant rendering pyrolysis oil, which mostly consisted of middle-distillate (naphtha and diesel) hydrocarbons. The diesel fraction (170–370 °C) was fractionated, and its further upgrade was assessed in a hydroprocessing pilot plant at the Centre for Research and Technology Hellas (CERTH) in Greece. The final fuel was evaluated with respect to the diesel fuel quality specifications EN 590, which characterized it as a promising alternative diesel pool component with excellent ignition quality characteristics and low back end volatility.
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