| Literature DB >> 34725256 |
Elizabeth R Belden1, Nikolaos K Kazantzis1, Christopher M Reddy2, Hauke Kite-Powell3, Michael T Timko1, Eduardo Italiani1, Dudley R Herschbach4.
Abstract
Collecting and removing ocean plastics can mitigate their environmental impacts; however, ocean cleanup will be a complex and energy-intensive operation that has not been fully evaluated. This work examines the thermodynamic feasibility and subsequent implications of hydrothermally converting this waste into a fuel to enable self-powered cleanup. A comprehensive probabilistic exergy analysis demonstrates that hydrothermal liquefaction has potential to generate sufficient energy to power both the process and the ship performing the cleanup. Self-powered cleanup reduces the number of roundtrips to port of a waste-laden ship, eliminating the need for fossil fuel use for most plastic concentrations. Several cleanup scenarios are modeled for the Great Pacific Garbage Patch (GPGP), corresponding to 230 t to 11,500 t of plastic removed yearly; the range corresponds to uncertainty in the surface concentration of plastics in the GPGP. Estimated cleanup times depends mainly on the number of booms that can be deployed in the GPGP without sacrificing collection efficiency. Self-powered cleanup may be a viable approach for removal of plastics from the ocean, and gaps in our understanding of GPGP characteristics should be addressed to reduce uncertainty.Entities:
Keywords: Monte Carlo simulation; exergy analysis; hydrothermal liquefaction; ocean plastic
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34725256 PMCID: PMC8609629 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2107250118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205
Fig. 1.Conceptual design of a shipboard HTL-based process for converting ocean-borne plastics into usable fuel: process flow diagram. The entire process is designed to fit within a standard 20-ft shipping container.
Probability distribution profiles of the uncertain model input variables
| Parameter | Uniform probability distribution ranges | Justification |
| Weight percent plastic in reactor | 10 to 30% | Maintain realistic pumping capabilities |
| Ocean temperature | 17 °C to 30 °C | Account for varying ocean temperature based on location and season |
| Heat exchanger efficiency | 50 to 80% | Based on average heat exchanger efficiencies |
| Engine power | 1,800 hp to 2,200 hp | Engine size of an average large fishing trawler with a 10% variance to account for variable weather conditions and engine power draws |
| Engine efficiency | 35 to 40% | Based on current engine technology efficiencies |
| Heat of combustion variance | 0.98 to 1.02 | Account for slight variance in selectivity of products and therefore variance in heat of combustion |
| PP overall conversion to oil | 60 to 100% | Optimal literature value with variance ( |
| PE overall conversion to oil | 60 to 80% | Optimal literature value with variance ( |
| PE/PP mixture overall conversion to oil | 70 to 90% | Optimal literature value with variance ( |
Fig. 2.Probability of producing more exergy than is consumed by the combination of the HTL process itself and the ship’s engine for (line a) a 2:1 PE to PP mixture, (line b) PP, and (line c) PE for (A) full engine power and (B) optimized engine power [1/3 engine power (19)].
Fig. 3.Overview of the process for plastic removal out of the GPGP showing (A) the total system overview, (B) part of the system of collection booms, (C) a single collection boom, and (D) the HTL reactor.
Plastic removed from the GPGP using shipboard HTL for different surface plastic concentrations
| Plastic concentration in GPGP | Plastic removed per year | Percentage of plastic-derived fuel consumed yearly |
| 2,500 | 1.2 × 107 | 580 |
| 1,000 | 4.6 × 106 | 230 |
| 500 | 2.3 × 106 | 120 |
| 200 | 9.2 × 105 | 50 |
| 50 | 2.3 × 105 | 12 |
* Surface concentration of plastic in the GPGP (1) for a fixed value of 79,000 tons of plastic contained in the GPGP(2).
† Plastic removed from 2,500 booms per year with a 70% collection efficiency.
‡ Percentage of total required fuel consumption that can be covered with plastic-derived fuels assuming a fuel density of 0.84 kg/L, a conversion range of 60%, and fuel consumption of 90 GPH.
Fig. 4.Estimation of the time required to completely clear the GPGP based on high (2,500 g⋅km2) and low (50 g⋅km2) concentration estimations (1) for plastic within the GPGP for deployment distance between booms of 1 km to 50 km and the corresponding number of booms deployed.