Litcius/Paper detail

Population Balance Equations for Reactive Separation in Polymer Upcycling

Changhae Andrew Kim, Chinmay A. Sahasrabudhe, Yiyu Wang, Ryan Yappert, Andreas Heyden, Wenyu Huang, Aaron D. Sadow, Baron Peters

2024Langmuir16 citationsDOI

Abstract

Many polymer upcycling efforts aim to convert plastic waste into high-value liquid hydrocarbons. However, the subsequent cleavage of middle distillates to light gases can be problematic. The reactor often contains a vapor phase (light gases and middle distillates) and a liquid phase (molten polymers and waxes with a suspended or dissolved catalyst). Because the catalyst resides in the liquid phase, middle distillates that partition into the vapor phase are protected against further cleavage into light gases. In this paper, we consider a simple reactive separation strategy, in which a gas outflow removes the volatile products as they form. We combine vapor-liquid equilibrium models and population balance equations (PBEs) to describe polymer upcycling in a two-phase semibatch reactor. The results suggest that the temperature, headspace volume, and flow rate of the reactor can be used to tune selectivity toward the middle distillates, in addition to the molecular mechanism of catalysis. We anticipate that two-phase reactor models will be important in many polymer upcycling processes and that reactive separation strategies will provide ways to boost the yield of the desired products in these cases.

Topics & Concepts

PolymerChemistryDistillationChemical engineeringCatalysisPopulationYield (engineering)Volumetric flow rateReactive distillationOrganic chemistryThermodynamicsMaterials scienceComposite materialPhysicsEngineeringDemographySociologyMicroplastics and Plastic PollutionRecycling and Waste Management TechniquesSustainable Supply Chain Management