It is very easy to get liquid distillate in large amounts from any PE, PS, PP or these common plastics. It is actually performed in large scale.
XFusion's product looks pretty familiar, and by greenish color I would say there was little residue of PVC, pure PS yields mostly deep yellow liquid.
PE and PP yield mostly medium length hydrocarbons and major impurities are BTX. With fractionation these can be used on diesel engine. There was an
article on this on a german forum where guys made a reactor from oil drum and produced quite large amounts of fuel subsitute from common waste
plastic. From PS one will get mostly styrene which can be fractionated to pure form as well. 5-30% will be gaseous form, and one can actually use
these to fuel the heater for the reaction. There will be 10-20% of weight of residue which is very dark, heavy fuel oil-type goo and soot, which is
sticky as hell and probably very highly carcinogenic.
From PVC there may be little liquid residue. It should be mostly benzene, if it is common, non-mixed PVC. PVC must not be used if liquid fractions are
wanted, because large amounts of HCl formed, which may contaminate the liquid and cause major problems in use.
[Edited on 11-10-2014 by Oxirane] |