Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Year:2015
Source: Fuel from Plastic waste by Vijaykumar B. Chanashetty and B.M. Patil
Year:2013
Source: Conversion of Plastic Wastes into Fuels by Antony Raja and Advaith Murali
Year:2013
Year: 2015
Source: Green Product of Liquid Fuel from Plastic Waste by Pyrolysis at 900 °C by Dianta
Mustofa Kamal and Fuad Zainuri
Year:2014
Source: Fuel from Waste - Catalytic degradation of plastic waste to liquid fuels by Agnieszka
Ćwik
Year:2016
Source: Pyrolytic Waste Plastic Oil and Its Diesel Blend: Fuel Characterization by M. Z. H. Khan,
M. Sultana, M. R. Al-Mamun, and M. R. Hasan
Year:2014
Source: Obtaining Fuels from Plastic Waste by Rima Ingle,Rahul Masal, and Atul Gargade
Year:2017
Source: Alternative Diesel from Waste Plastics by Stella Bezergianni , Athanasios Dimitriadis ,
Gian-Claudio Faussone and Dimitrios Karonis
Year:2016
Source: Extraction of Pyrolysis oil from Waste Plastics by Kanika Mathu Chaudhari Shubham,
Hegde Sunadh, Pawar Aditya, and Kakad Hardeep Singh
Year:2015
Year:2016
Year:2015
The production of plastics starts with a distillation process in an oil refinery. The process
involves the separation of heavy crude oil into lighter groups called fractions. Every fraction is a
mixture of hydrocarbon chains which can differ in terms of the structure and the size of their
molecules. Naptha, which is one of the fractions, is the vital element for the production of
plastics. So basically the concept of recycling the waste plastic and turning it into fuel is
rewinding the process of its origin, which is crude oil and making it a combustible material. Thus,
gasoline is formed.