End of Life Tires as a Possible Source of Toxic Substances Emission in the Process of Combustion
Several million tons of end of life tires (ELTs) are piled annually as a result of human activities. Various methods have been proposed for the extraction and recycling of the resource potential of ELTs. The chemical composition of ELTs seems to enable their usage as a fuel after mechanical separati...
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doaj-0691fdeb42da4609a92fc4b78b0089952020-11-25T01:55:15ZengMDPI AGResources2079-92762019-06-018211310.3390/resources8020113resources8020113End of Life Tires as a Possible Source of Toxic Substances Emission in the Process of CombustionIrina Glushankova0Aleksandr Ketov1Marina Krasnovskikh2Larisa Rudakova3Iakov Vaisman4Department of Environmental Engineering, Perm National Research Polytechnic University, Perm 614990, RussiaDepartment of Environmental Engineering, Perm National Research Polytechnic University, Perm 614990, RussiaDepartment of Inorganic Chemistry, Chemical Technology and Technosphere Safety, Perm State National Research University, Perm 614000, RussiaDepartment of Environmental Engineering, Perm National Research Polytechnic University, Perm 614990, RussiaDepartment of Environmental Engineering, Perm National Research Polytechnic University, Perm 614990, RussiaSeveral million tons of end of life tires (ELTs) are piled annually as a result of human activities. Various methods have been proposed for the extraction and recycling of the resource potential of ELTs. The chemical composition of ELTs seems to enable their usage as a fuel after mechanical separation of a steel cord. Indeed, in the rubber of ELTs, up to 90 mass% accounts for carbon and hydrogen. Currently, it is by incineration that a significant proportion of ELTs is utilized. However, ELTs contain not only sulfur, which is used for vulcanization, but also nitrogen-containing additives. The behavior of these heteroatoms during oxidation is poorly investigated. It has been shown that the pyrolysis liquid fuel obtained from ELTs contains such sulfur compounds as mercaptans and nitrogen in the form of hydrocyanic acid and cyanogen. Deep oxidation of ELTs results in the oxidation of sulfur compounds to dioxide, but the oxidation products have been found to contain traces of cyanogen. Taking this into account, one should pay attention to the ways of transforming heteroatoms during the process of ELT oxidation and the products of ELT pyrolysis as potential sources of highly toxic gas emissions.https://www.mdpi.com/2079-9276/8/2/113end of life tiresthermal methodsenergy resourceheteroatomsecology |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Irina Glushankova Aleksandr Ketov Marina Krasnovskikh Larisa Rudakova Iakov Vaisman |
spellingShingle |
Irina Glushankova Aleksandr Ketov Marina Krasnovskikh Larisa Rudakova Iakov Vaisman End of Life Tires as a Possible Source of Toxic Substances Emission in the Process of Combustion Resources end of life tires thermal methods energy resource heteroatoms ecology |
author_facet |
Irina Glushankova Aleksandr Ketov Marina Krasnovskikh Larisa Rudakova Iakov Vaisman |
author_sort |
Irina Glushankova |
title |
End of Life Tires as a Possible Source of Toxic Substances Emission in the Process of Combustion |
title_short |
End of Life Tires as a Possible Source of Toxic Substances Emission in the Process of Combustion |
title_full |
End of Life Tires as a Possible Source of Toxic Substances Emission in the Process of Combustion |
title_fullStr |
End of Life Tires as a Possible Source of Toxic Substances Emission in the Process of Combustion |
title_full_unstemmed |
End of Life Tires as a Possible Source of Toxic Substances Emission in the Process of Combustion |
title_sort |
end of life tires as a possible source of toxic substances emission in the process of combustion |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Resources |
issn |
2079-9276 |
publishDate |
2019-06-01 |
description |
Several million tons of end of life tires (ELTs) are piled annually as a result of human activities. Various methods have been proposed for the extraction and recycling of the resource potential of ELTs. The chemical composition of ELTs seems to enable their usage as a fuel after mechanical separation of a steel cord. Indeed, in the rubber of ELTs, up to 90 mass% accounts for carbon and hydrogen. Currently, it is by incineration that a significant proportion of ELTs is utilized. However, ELTs contain not only sulfur, which is used for vulcanization, but also nitrogen-containing additives. The behavior of these heteroatoms during oxidation is poorly investigated. It has been shown that the pyrolysis liquid fuel obtained from ELTs contains such sulfur compounds as mercaptans and nitrogen in the form of hydrocyanic acid and cyanogen. Deep oxidation of ELTs results in the oxidation of sulfur compounds to dioxide, but the oxidation products have been found to contain traces of cyanogen. Taking this into account, one should pay attention to the ways of transforming heteroatoms during the process of ELT oxidation and the products of ELT pyrolysis as potential sources of highly toxic gas emissions. |
topic |
end of life tires thermal methods energy resource heteroatoms ecology |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2079-9276/8/2/113 |
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