Multiple use of waste catalysts with and without regeneration for waste polymer cracking

A. Salmiaton, A. A. Garforth

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Waste plastics contain a substantial number of valuable chemicals. The wastes from post-consumer as well as from industrial production can be recycled to valuable chemical feedstock, which can be used in refineries and/or petrochemical industries. This chemical recycling process is an ideal approach in recycling the waste for a better environment. Polymer cracking using a laboratory fluidised bed reactor concentrated on the used highly contaminated catalyst, E-Cat 2. Even though E-Cat 2 had low activity due to fewer acid sites, the products yielded were similar with amorphous ASA and were far better than thermal cracking. The high levels of heavy metals, namely nickel and vanadium, deposited during their lifetime as an FCC catalyst, did not greatly affect on the catalyst activity. It was also shown that E-Cat 2 could be used with and without regeneration. Although there was more deactivation when there was no regeneration step, the yield of gases (C2-C7) remained fairly constant. For the first time, these results indicate that "waste" FCC catalyst (E-Cat) is a good candidate for future feedstock recycling of polymer waste. The major benefits of using E-Cat are a low market price, the ability to tolerate reuse and regeneration capacity. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1139-1145
    Number of pages6
    JournalWaste Management
    Volume31
    Issue number6
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Jun 2011

    Keywords

    • Acid site
    • Chemical feedstocks
    • Chemical recycling
    • FCC catalysts
    • Feedstock recycling
    • Fluidised bed
    • Industrial production
    • Low markets
    • Multiple use
    • Petrochemical industry
    • Polymer wastes
    • Post-consumer
    • Regeneration capacity
    • Thermal cracking
    • Waste catalysts
    • Waste plastic
    • Waste polymers
    • Catalyst regeneration
    • Catalytic cracking
    • Chemical reactors
    • Feedstocks
    • Fluidization
    • Fluidized beds
    • Heavy metals
    • Polymers
    • Recycling
    • Vanadium
    • Catalyst activity
    • aluminum oxide
    • butane
    • gasoline
    • hydrocarbon
    • isobutane
    • isobutylene
    • nickel
    • polymer
    • silicon dioxide
    • sodium peroxide
    • unclassified drug
    • vanadium
    • catalyst
    • recycling
    • waste management
    • acidity
    • article
    • chemical reaction
    • coke formation
    • degradation
    • equilibrium catalyst
    • feedstock recycling
    • fluid catalytic cracking
    • fluidized bed reactor
    • hydrogen transfer
    • priority journal
    • process design
    • process technology
    • Aluminum Silicates
    • Catalysis
    • Chromatography
    • Gas
    • Metals
    • Heavy
    • Plastics
    • Refuse Disposal

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