4.8 Article

Catalytic microwave pyrolysis of waste engine oil using metallic pyrolysis char

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APPLIED CATALYSIS B-ENVIRONMENTAL
卷 176, 期 -, 页码 601-617

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.apcatb.2015.04.014

关键词

Pyrolysis; Char; Catalyst; Waste; Oil

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Microwave pyrolysis was performed on waste engine oil pre-mixed with different amounts of metallic-char catalyst produced previously from a similar microwave pyrolysis process. The metallic-char catalyst was first prepared by pretreatment with calcination followed by analyses to determine its various properties. The heating characteristics of the mixture of waste oil and metallic-char during the pyrolysis were investigated, and the catalytic influence of the metallic-char on the yield and characteristics of the pyrolysis products are discussed with emphasis on the composition of oil and gaseous products. The metallic-char, detected to have a porous structure and high surface area (124 m(2)/g), showed high thermal stability in a N-2 atmosphere and it was also found to have phases of metals and metal oxides attached or adsorbed onto the char, representing a potentially suitable catalyst to be used in pyrolysis cracking process. The metallic-char initially acted as an adsorptive-support to adsorb metals, metal oxides and waste oil. Then, the char became a microwave absorbent that absorbed microwave energy and heated up to a high temperature in a short time and it was found to generate arcing and sparks during microwave pyrolysis of the waste oil, resulting in the formation of hot spots (high temperature sites with temperature up to 650 degrees C) within the reactor under the influence of microwave heating. The presence of this high temperature metallic-char, the amounts of which are likely to increase when increasing amounts of metallic-char were added to the waste oil (5, 10, and 20 wt% of the amount of waste oil added to the reactor), had provided a reducing chemical environment in which the metallic-char acted as an intermediate reductant to reduce the adsorbed metals or metal oxides into metallic states, which then functioned as a catalyst to provide more reaction sites that enhanced the cracking and heterogeneous reactions that occurred during the pyrolysis to convert the waste oil to produce higher yields of light hydrocarbons, H-2 and CO gases in the pyrolysis products, recording a yield of up to 74 wt% of light C-5-C-10 hydrocarbons and 42 vol% of H-2 and CO gases. The catalytic microwave pyrolysis produced 65-85 wt% yield of pyrolysis-oil containing C-5-C-20 hydrocarbons that can potentially be upgraded to produce transport-grade fuels. In addition, the recovered pyrolysis-gases (up to 33 wt%) were dominated by aliphatic hydrocarbons (up to 78 vol% of C-1-C-6 hydrocarbons) and significant amounts of valuable syngas (up to 42 vol% of H-2 and CO in total) with low heating values (LHV) ranging from 4.7 to 5.5 MJ/m(3), indicating that the pyrolysis-gases could also be used as a gaseous fuel or upgraded to produce more hydrogen as a second-generation fuel. The results indicate that the metallic-char shows advantages for use as a catalyst in microwave pyrolysis treatment of problematic waste oils. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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