4.6 Article

Plastic Waste Upcycling for Generation of Power and Methanol: Process Simulation and Energy-Exergy-Economic (3E) Analysis

Journal

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.iecr.3c02665

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

To address the global issue of plastic waste, waste to wealth techniques are being investigated. Different processes have been developed and analyzed through techno-economic analysis. Among them, GFP-CC and GFP-ME show higher energy efficiencies compared to INP-CC and INP-ME. However, from an economic standpoint, GFP-ME and INP-ME are not economically attractive without a larger subsidy fee or higher methanol selling price. The price of methanol and hydrogen have the greatest impact on economic performance, with INP-ME process being more resilient.
To address the global issue of plastic waste, the waste to wealth technique is under investigation. Four processes, known as INP-CC (incineration with carbon capture and power generation), GFP-CC (gasification with carbon capture and power generation), INP-ME (incineration with methanol and power cogeneration), and GFP-ME (gasification with methanol and power cogeneration), which include both traditional and innovative methods, have undergone development, simulation, and comprehensive comparison through techno-economic analysis. GFP-CC and GFP-ME are particularly favored for their energy efficiencies of 43.47 and 34.91%, respectively, in comparison to INP-CC (17.6%) and INP-ME (6.89%). Exergy flow diagrams reveal that the incinerator, gasifier, and combustion chamber account for over 50% of the exergy loss, highlighting their potential for intensification. However, from an economic standpoint, without a larger subsidy fee ($84 per ton) or higher methanol selling price ($550 per ton), processes GFP-ME and INP-ME are not economically attractive due to a negative net present value over 20 years. A sensitivity analysis of key economic parameters demonstrates that the price of methanol and hydrogen has the greatest impact on process economic performance. It appears that process INP-ME is more resilient in terms of economic performance when subjected to the same level of fluctuations in methanol and hydrogen prices, in comparison to GFP-ME.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available