کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
4471680 | 1315038 | 2014 | 7 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
• 64.52% waste polystyrene is recovered as styrene through pyrolysis.
• Statistical experimental design is applied for yield optimization for plastic waste pyrolysis.
• A mathematical model is built to predict pyrolytic yield of styrene under the study conditions.
• Electricity consumption of waste polystyrene pyrolysis in a laboratory-scale system is reported.
A work applied response surface methodology coupled with Box–Behnken design (RSM-BBD) has been developed to enhance styrene recovery from waste polystyrene (WPS) through pyrolysis. The relationship between styrene yield and three selected operating parameters (i.e., temperature, heating rate, and carrier gas flow rate) was investigated. A second order polynomial equation was successfully built to describe the process and predict styrene yield under the study conditions. The factors identified as statistically significant to styrene production were: temperature, with a quadratic effect; heating rate, with a linear effect; carrier gas flow rate, with a quadratic effect; interaction between temperature and carrier gas flow rate; and interaction between heating rate and carrier gas flow rate. The optimum conditions for the current system were determined to be at a temperature range of 470–505 °C, a heating rate of 40 °C/min, and a carrier gas flow rate range of 115–140 mL/min. Under such conditions, 64.52% WPS was recovered as styrene, which was 12% more than the highest reported yield for reactors of similar size. It is concluded that RSM-BBD is an effective approach for yield optimization of styrene recovery from WPS pyrolysis.
Journal: Waste Management - Volume 34, Issue 4, April 2014, Pages 763–769