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red369 2 days ago

I don't know much about this area at all, but it seems like it would be neat to have a plastic that stood up well to heat and moisture, but you could leave it soaking in some petrol/diesel/oil liquid, and it would melt into that and leave you with something still useable.

As I write this, it sounds like I'm just describing something like petrol in a solid form at room temperature. Perhaps there's something a little less far-fetched that people are working towards?

ars 2 days ago | parent | next [-]

> it sounds like I'm just describing something like petrol in a solid form at room temperature

That's what plastic IS. That's why it sounds like it, because plastic is in fact solid hydrocarbon.

So not only is it not farfetched, it exists today, which is also why incinerating plastic for energy is the best possible way to dispose it. You remove the plastic from the world, you reduce the amount of oil pumped for fuel, and you get to use the oil you do pump, twice! Once for plastic, and again for fuel.

It's one of those environmental slam dunks with zero downsides. (Before you ask: Modern incinerators do not release any toxins from burning plastic, none.)

PaulHoule 2 days ago | parent | next [-]

Polyolefin plastics like

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyethylene

and

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polypropylene

and even

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polystyrene

are "solid hydrocarbons" but most plastics are more complex than that. One reason we quit burning trash in many places is the presence of

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyvinyl_chloride

which produces HCl which eats the incinerator. [1] Sure you can build a chemically tougher incinerator and add lime but practically stripping toxins from incinerators is a function of building a stripper tuned to whatever toxins are expected to be in the particular waste and frequently adding something that reacts with them. You can't really "burn up" heavy metals and certain other poisons and those either go up the stack or are part of the ash that has to be disposed of.

A technology you hear about more than you hear about real implementations is "chemical recycling of plastics" through pyrolysis which implement more or less controlled combustion and captures petrochemical molecules that can be used either for fuel or to make plastics and other chemicals: these manage to capture or consume most of the products but some of the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons that are produced when you burn plastic are practically drugs that cause cancer

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benzo(a)pyrene

[1] Plenty of others contain oxygen: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyethylene_terephthalate or nitrogen such: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acrylonitrile_butadiene_styren... and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nylon

ars 2 days ago | parent [-]

Most disposable plastic is not PVC. Because Chlorine prolongs the life of the plastic, it's specifically used on things that you don't throw out.

In any case incinerators can handle the chlorine - it's so reactive that it's actually very easy to filter.

> You can't really "burn up" heavy metals

There are no heavy metals in plastic, and very little in consumer waste as a whole.

> are "solid hydrocarbons" but most plastics are more complex than that

But those 3 you listed are the vast majority of the thrown out plastics.

PaulHoule 2 days ago | parent [-]

Municipal waste has a large fraction of waste from demolished buildings which includes wood, concrete, bricks, all sorts of stuff. PVC is a significant part of that waste because it is used for siding, floors, etc.

In a consolidated municipal waste stream heavy metals are a concern because they concentrate in the ash which has to be carefully stored. This kind of system

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasma_gasification

is supposed to encapsulate heavy metals into slag particles that aren't very mobile and can be incorporated into roads, building aggregates and such but people have struggled to make them work, part of it is that the syngas plant and whatever uses the syngas and cleans up the syngas and/or the products of using the syngas is a chemical factory that depends on the inputs having a certain composition and the composition of a municipal waste stream is not at all constant.

PET is a major thrown-out plastic that's not a hydrocarbon, it's also the most recycled. Polystyrene, funny enough, is easy to chemically recycle but not through pyrolysis, it's the sort of thing you might even demo in a high school chemistry class if styrene wasn't so carcinogenic. It's never caught on because expanded polystyrene is hard to handle, transport and bring back to a chemical factory large enough to efficiently consume.

ars 2 days ago | parent [-]

How is PET not a hydrocarbon (for the purposes of burning it)? It's (C10 H8 O4)n the oxygen makes it not technically a hydrocarbon, but it will burn just fine and cleanly.

Your point about building waste is valid, but I think most of that stuff goes in dumpsters and can be directed to a different wasting handling.

lstodd 2 days ago | parent [-]

Hah.

We burned shavings/rejects from a polyester-resin+glass boat building.. in a 200L drum.

That was quite smoky and smelly, but still I think better than just shipping it all off for burying in a landfill. And fiberglass decomposed basically into fine sand too.

kragen 2 days ago | parent [-]

Environmentally speaking, shipping it off to a landfill would have been orders of magnitude better; burning it released thousands or millions of times more pollution. Most polyester resins are aromatic, so incomplete combustion can produce a wide variety of quite toxic substances.

lstodd 2 days ago | parent [-]

I guess we did release some. Mostly soot and half-burned hydrocarbons to be decomposed by solar UV. Still, thinking of all this just being buried for like 2e6 years ... that seems even more wrong.

yellowapple 2 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> It's one of those environmental slam dunks with zero downsides

In relation to directly burning oil for fuel, yeah. In relation to other disposal methods, there's still the pretty major downside of being dependent on a non-renewable resource, in addition to…

> (Before you ask: Modern incinerators do not release any toxins from burning plastic, none.)

Greenhouse gas emissions are still an issue, though, no? Or do the incinerators capture that?

toast0 2 days ago | parent [-]

If you were going to burn oil for power, and instead you burn used plastic that for power, greenhouse gas emissions from the burning are roughly similar. However, you skip the emissions from oil extraction and transport, assuming the plastic is burned close to its use / collection.

kortilla 2 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

How do these systems handle the extra crap on the plastic?

par1970 2 days ago | parent | prev [-]

So do we already do this? And if not, why not?

ars 2 days ago | parent [-]

We sure do, Sweden imports trash (actual trash, not recycling) because it's a huge part of their energy source.

A large amount of plastic recycling is burned, but always in secret, because when people find out they freak out, because they mistakenly think that making some new plastic out of it is somehow better.

lazide 2 days ago | parent | prev [-]

Petrol is really quite harsh and includes cancerous chemicals like benzene in sizable quantities. It’s not something you can soak something in and then use to expose to food.

Diesel and other oils tend to be (somewhat) less bad - but there are many oils in food which are nearly identical, and hence anything which breaks down in those situations is likely to breakdown while in food contact too.