On acids:
Wheels, about a year and a half ago I bumped into large amounts of HCL when distilling a batch of WMO that had been contaminated with TCE. I brought it up here, and it produced a lot of dialog. At first I thought that the acids would react violently with metals, such as aluminum and/or copper. Then IMAKBIODIESEL started looking at the acidification of petroleum distillates, and found that the petroleum industry uses metals to test, and reduce the acidity of their distillates, that is when we all decided that adding reactive metals to the condensing stream was a good idea, so I went back to using copper and aluminum packing for my distillation column. Yes, if there are acids, then that column packing gets very clean looking, like new. And, yes, there are always a small amount of acids produced in cracking, but nothing like what is produced when cracking halogenated hydrocarbons.
On dioxins:
After doing a considerable amount of research on the toxic byproducts of the pyrolysis of halogenated hydrocarbons I had to conclude that dioxins and other "super toxins" will result in the retort if halogenated hydrocarbons are cracked.
On cracked halogenated hydrocarbons:
Even if one were to mitigate for the toxic and acid gasses and dioxins that are the result of cracking halogenated hydrocarbons the resulting distillates are useless as fuels, because they tend to be far too dense, and tend to dissolve elastomers that are commonly used in diesel engines.
The conclusion is cracking halogenated hydrocarbons is not going to be productive for anyone other than the people who make them, so those halogenated hydrocarbons should be shipped back to the manufacturer for recycling.
Most of this research I documents at this link:Toxic by-products of pyrolysis
Wheels, about a year and a half ago I bumped into large amounts of HCL when distilling a batch of WMO that had been contaminated with TCE. I brought it up here, and it produced a lot of dialog. At first I thought that the acids would react violently with metals, such as aluminum and/or copper. Then IMAKBIODIESEL started looking at the acidification of petroleum distillates, and found that the petroleum industry uses metals to test, and reduce the acidity of their distillates, that is when we all decided that adding reactive metals to the condensing stream was a good idea, so I went back to using copper and aluminum packing for my distillation column. Yes, if there are acids, then that column packing gets very clean looking, like new. And, yes, there are always a small amount of acids produced in cracking, but nothing like what is produced when cracking halogenated hydrocarbons.
On dioxins:
After doing a considerable amount of research on the toxic byproducts of the pyrolysis of halogenated hydrocarbons I had to conclude that dioxins and other "super toxins" will result in the retort if halogenated hydrocarbons are cracked.
On cracked halogenated hydrocarbons:
Even if one were to mitigate for the toxic and acid gasses and dioxins that are the result of cracking halogenated hydrocarbons the resulting distillates are useless as fuels, because they tend to be far too dense, and tend to dissolve elastomers that are commonly used in diesel engines.
The conclusion is cracking halogenated hydrocarbons is not going to be productive for anyone other than the people who make them, so those halogenated hydrocarbons should be shipped back to the manufacturer for recycling.
Most of this research I documents at this link:Toxic by-products of pyrolysis
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