2022 Annual Meeting
Powered By Plastic: Plastics into FUEL
and island communities. In 2018, only 8-10% of post-consumer plastic waste was recycled. By
employing a chemical recycling process (pyrolysis), a variety of commodity plastics can be
converted into a usable diesel additive in a single step with no additional processing. Prior to
loading in the reactor, plastics are characterized for plastic types and any potential fillers using
Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC) and Thermogravimetric Analysis (TGA). Mixed plastic
streams can be loaded in the reactor but PVC (chlorine release) and PETE (high mechanical
recycling value) are not used at this time. The majority of our studies have focused on HDPE,
LDPE, PP, and PS, the largest group of commodity plastics encountered in waste streams.
A 1 kg capacity pyrolysis reactor PTF 1.0 (Niblerator) was designed and constructed at OSU in
- It was a Schedule 40 carbon steel pipe with two chambers (plastic and packed bed) heated
with three 4â high resistance heater bands. To improve accessibility in the target communities,
PTF 2.0 (Helenator) was constructed in 2022. It is a kiln with heating of air surrounding a
Schedule 10 SS single-chamber reactor to heat the plastics. Several other improvements were
made, such as changing packing from Raschig rings to stone pebbles and powering at 120 V
instead of 240V. Solar panels to provide electricity are planned in the future.
Studies with the Helenator on a wide variety of plastic streams have focused on creating campus
waste plastics circularity and ocean plastics. Campus circularity has involved working with OSU
Campus recycling to do âdumpster divingâ for waste plastics and a pilot project with a local
coffee shop (Dutch Bros.) to collect their cups which are primarily PP. Ocean plastics were
recovered from a beach clean-up in summer 2022 on the Katmai Reserve in Alaska with our
partners Ocean Plastics Recovery Project (Kodiak AK). Each of these plastic streams, and
several others, have been run in the Helenator to produce a quality âdiesel-likeâ fuel which could
readily be blended into commercial diesel. Future work will focus on increasing the diversity of
plastic waste streams to study the effects ocean salt, biomass, grease and grime have on product
yield and hydrocarbon distribution. In addition, we are in process of development of a rapid GC
analysis technique for the diesel product.