Hello all, Mr. excalibu, I've pyrolysis process for waste oil used within the reactor, the result is a net oil smelly very pungent and color tends to Green, Is there any advice about it, thanks
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How to turn plastic waste into diesel fuel cheaply
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Originally posted by Chris@NL View PostIn a plastic injection moulding machine there is no oxigen at all in the barrel.
Once the plastic is melted the air is pushed out to the back.
If you had air trapped in the plastic it would give you a bad product in the mould.
A very small screw/barrel gives you up to 100 liters of plastic per hour.
These barrels are fitted on 75 tons machines.(clamp force).
The only problem with these screws is, you need a very strong motor.
Normally its driven by a hydraulic motor.
Col
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Originally posted by fox32 View PostVery nice design and very helpfull, i built a simmilar one, it is not ready yet, i will put some pictures soon, i see you have some nifty improvements, the Draw back arrestor is a new thing to me, it is there to prevent water to be sucked up from the bubler?
Originally posted by fox32 View PostAlso, the Flashback arrestor i had some dificulties managing to build one, since i can't find fine steel wool so i'we used some kitchen steel sponges, your design is something simmilar or you use other matterials? I was thinking a one made from a car exhaust catalyzer...!
Originally posted by fox32 View PostI see you have a heat exchanger/condenser, i was planning for my diesel trap to act as condensor , may i ask why you chose this design?
Thanks Excalibur, great work as always!
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Originally posted by dedooo View PostHello all, Mr. excalibu, I've pyrolysis process for waste oil used within the reactor, the result is a net oil smelly very pungent and color tends to Green, Is there any advice about it, thanks
I think the odor is hydrogen sulfide (H2S)
If it's H2S then Wiki has some good clues as to how to deal with it.
H2S is soluble in water. Could agitating the diesel with water reduce the smell??
H2S has a boiling point of -60*C. I believe the smell does reduce with some time exposed to atmosphere.
Otherwise there's some good reading on the subject The book refers to the smell as mercaptans.
Edit: I was just talking about this subject today with a friend. He said the Shell book quoted trickling across limestone as one method for smell removal?? Sorry I must read the book again when I get time.Last edited by Excalibur; 04-02-2014, 09:50 AM.
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Originally posted by dedooo View PostHello all, Mr. excalibu, I've pyrolysis process for waste oil used within the reactor, the result is a net oil smelly very pungent and color tends to Green, Is there any advice about it, thanksI have been running various blends of waste oils and unleaded gasoline in a 1983 Chevy G-20 van with a 6.2L diesel V-8 engine, with a Stanadyne Rotary DB2 IP since Feb, 2007. I have started the engine with no difficulty and no block heater on an 80/20 (WVO/gas) blend down to 0F (-18c). I have found that by blending as little as 15% gasoline in the summer, and as much as 50% in the winter, my engine starts and runs as if it was running on diesel fuel.
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Originally posted by dedooo View PostOutcome after an hour and a half, diesel Excellent http://im63.gulfup.com/i9e2ri.jpg
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retort
l try my pyrolysis system again after 1 hour and 30 minutes no gas come out from my system so l stop my system after it cools down l find about 300ml of yellow fuel and l light it and burn. l open my retort and find my plastic didnt melt well. my conclusion is it is very important to use insulation. l will try it with insulation
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jonathan, sorry you're having problems. Good insulation can make a big difference to efficiency. We need good economics for heat especially where energy is expensive. I started thinking about how much heat was required to distill hydrocarbons. I searched out a report from mid 90's.
Conventional atmospheric and vacuum crude distillation units require about 100,000 BTUs (British Thermal Units)of furnace energy per barrel processed. Since a barrel of oil contains about 6,200,000 BTU's, the required furnace energy amounts to about 1.6 percent of the processed oil.
One oil barrel= 42 US gallons, which is about 159 liters or 35 imperial gallons.
So therefore, 100,000 BTU or 29.3Kw per barrel.
Naturally, the figures are from some very efficient refinery plants where oil companies have been developing their processes over decades. Just how close to that 1.6% us DIY can get will be interesting.
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retort
thanks a lot excalibur for this sharing very important.l having proplems but l am 100% sure l have tempreture proplem my retort is 24 inch heght and 12.5 wide as i say before l find plastic doesnt melt well after 1hour 30 minutes. l will try with insulation
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Originally posted by Excalibur View Postjonathan, sorry you're having problems. Good insulation can make a big difference to efficiency. We need good economics for heat especially where energy is expensive. I started thinking about how much heat was required to distill hydrocarbons. I searched out a report from mid 90's.
Conventional atmospheric and vacuum crude distillation units require about 100,000 BTUs (British Thermal Units)of furnace energy per barrel processed. Since a barrel of oil contains about 6,200,000 BTU's, the required furnace energy amounts to about 1.6 percent of the processed oil.
One oil barrel= 42 US gallons, which is about 159 liters or 35 imperial gallons.
So therefore, 100,000 BTU or 29.3Kw per barrel.
Naturally, the figures are from some very efficient refinery plants where oil companies have been developing their processes over decades. Just how close to that 1.6% us DIY can get will be interesting.
1 Fluid barrel = 31.5 US gallons. So, what is this measurement really based on???I have been running various blends of waste oils and unleaded gasoline in a 1983 Chevy G-20 van with a 6.2L diesel V-8 engine, with a Stanadyne Rotary DB2 IP since Feb, 2007. I have started the engine with no difficulty and no block heater on an 80/20 (WVO/gas) blend down to 0F (-18c). I have found that by blending as little as 15% gasoline in the summer, and as much as 50% in the winter, my engine starts and runs as if it was running on diesel fuel.
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Originally posted by Beyond Biodiesel View PostThis is very useful data on the thermodynamics of crude distillation; however, I am a bit confused by the barrel= 42 US gallons unit that Excalibur came up with, because I know that the barrel is said to be 55gallons. So I then Googled "convert barels to gallons" and got the following, which confused me even more.
1 Fluid barrel = 31.5 US gallons. So, what is this measurement really based on???
Extract from Wiki
The study of crude distillation thermodynamics was from The University of Missouri.
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Originally posted by kedigeninside the reactor
Originally posted by Excalibur View PostAn oil barrel (abbreviated as bbl) is a unit of volume whose definition has not been universally standardized. In the United States and Canada, an oil barrel is defined as 42 US gallons, which is about 159 liters or 35 imperial gallons.
Extract from Wiki
The study of crude distillation thermodynamics was from The University of Missouri.I have been running various blends of waste oils and unleaded gasoline in a 1983 Chevy G-20 van with a 6.2L diesel V-8 engine, with a Stanadyne Rotary DB2 IP since Feb, 2007. I have started the engine with no difficulty and no block heater on an 80/20 (WVO/gas) blend down to 0F (-18c). I have found that by blending as little as 15% gasoline in the summer, and as much as 50% in the winter, my engine starts and runs as if it was running on diesel fuel.
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Originally posted by Beyond Biodiesel View PostKedigen, I think you are suggesting putting the insulation inside of the retort. I would not think any traditional insulation would work well there, and it would prevent heat from entering the retort to heat the feed stock.
Thanks, Excalibur, that helps.
Maybe he means putting the heater inside the reactor, that would make more sense.
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Originally posted by fox32 View PostMaybe he means putting the heater inside the reactor, that would make more sense.
kedigen, please elaborate on the question. I think your meaning is being lost in translation.
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