Process for recycling composite materials
10072358 · 2018-09-11
Assignee
Inventors
- Antônio Carlos Da Cruz (São José dos Campos, BR)
- Fábio Santos da Silva (São José dos Campos, BR)
- Rafael Razuk Garcia (São José dos Campos, BR)
Cpc classification
B01D53/323
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D2259/818
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C10B53/07
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
D01F9/12
TEXTILES; PAPER
Y02P20/143
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
D01F9/12
TEXTILES; PAPER
B01D53/32
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C08G85/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
The present patent of invention describes a recycling process to recover fibrous reinforcing material of composite materials, particularly carbon fiber, primary reactor compound (101), for the controlled pyrolysis and oxidation of the composite material matrix (resin) at low temperature (400 C. to 500 C.) and a system for treating waste gases produced by thermal decomposition of composite material matrixes which employs a secondary reactor (201), containing within the same a thermal plasma arc (211). The main characteristic of the process, within the scope of the carbon fiber recycling, is the possibility of maintaining the fabric web, obtaining fabrics made of pure carbon fiber, without a significant amount of residues and preserving their structural characteristics. The thermal plasma allows managing high temperatures (2,000 C. to 15,000 C.) in a controlled atmosphere, which allows the dissociation of long chains of molecules into ions that are recombined to produce combustible gases and other acid or alkaline gases that are easily neutralized and retained in gas cleaning systems.
Claims
1. A process for recycling a composite material, wherein the process comprises the following steps: (i) providing a composite material comprised of fibers to be recovered and a polymeric matrix; (ii) placing the composite material into a primary reactor and conducting pyrolysis of the composite material in the primary reactor to obtain the fibers with a soot residue of the polymeric matrix; (iii) washing the fibers with the soot residue with deionized water to separate the soot residue from the fibers and to allow the deionized water to be absorbed by the fibers; and (iv) oxidizing the fibers comprising absorbed deionized water by heating the fibers comprising absorbed deionized water in the presence of an oxidizing gas stream to thereby obtain recovered fibers.
2. The process according to claim 1, wherein the pyrolysis step (ii) comprises confining the composite material in the primary reactor at a controlled atmosphere, and heating the confined composite material at temperatures ranging between 400 C. and 600 C. for a period varying between 30 and 40 minutes.
3. The process according to claim 2, wherein the pyrolysis step (ii) includes a step of gasifying components of a polymeric matrix of the composite material.
4. The process according to claim 1, wherein the oxidizing step (iv) is practiced at a temperature ranging between 350 C. and 450 C.
5. The process according to claim 1, wherein the pyrolysis step (ii) includes expelling waste gases from the primary reactor.
6. The process according to claim 1 wherein the composite material comprises at least one type of fibers selected from the group consisting of carbon fibers, glass fibers and aramid fibers.
7. The process according to claim 6, wherein the polymeric matrix further comprises a filler.
8. A process for recovering carbon fibers from a carbon fiber-containing composite material, wherein the process comprises the steps of: (i) placing a composite material comprising carbon fibers in a polymeric matrix into a primary reactor; (ii) conducting pyrolysis of the composite material in the primary reactor to obtain carbon fibers having a surface residue of pyrolyzed matrix material soot; (iii) washing the fibers with the surface soot residue with deionized water to remove the soot residue from the surface of the carbon fibers and to allow the deionized water to be absorbed by the carbon fibers; and (iv) oxidizing the carbon fibers comprising absorbed deionized water by heating the carbon fibers comprising absorbed deionized water in the presence of an oxidizing gas stream to thereby recover the carbon fibers.
9. The process according to claim 8, wherein the pyrolysis step (ii) comprises confining the composite material in the primary reactor at a controlled atmosphere, and heating the confined composite material at temperatures ranging between 400 C. and 600 C. for a period varying between 30 and 40 minutes.
10. The process according to claim 9, wherein the pyrolysis step (ii) includes a step of gasifying components of a polymeric matrix of the composite material.
11. The process according to claim 8, wherein the oxidizing step (iv) is practiced at a temperature ranging between 350 C. and 450 C.
12. The process according to claim 8, wherein the pyrolysis step (ii) includes expelling waste gases from the primary reactor.
13. The process according to claim 8, wherein the matrix further comprises a filler.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) A more detailed description of the present invention will be given below, based on one embodiment shown in the drawings. The figures show the following:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(10) According to one preferred embodiment and as shown in
(11) The process for recycling composite materials 100 aims to recover composite material fibers in order to preserve the mechanical and structural characteristics of this fiber, allowing to maintain the web of the processed fabric. Composite materials are those consisting of a polymeric matrix and a reinforcement made of fibers which may be carbon, glass and aramid fibers, and also fibrous materials impregnated with resin, thermoset and thermoplastic composites.
(12) According to
(13) Upon confinement in the primary reactor 101, a reagent gas is added through a reagent gas insertion point 105 and the composite material is heated at a temperature ranging between 400 C. and 600 C., in a controlled atmosphere, using nitrogen gas (N.sub.2) injection, which makes internal pressure slightly higher than the atmospheric pressure, only with the purpose of preventing atmospheric gases to flow into the primary reactor 101. More precisely, the temperature inside the primary reactor 101 is maintained at 500 C., with fluctuations of 20 C. for a period varying between 30 and 40 minutes. This is the pyrolysis step, which aims to gasify the components of the elements constituting the polymeric matrix of the composite material, leaving only soot residues on the fiber surface.
(14) Upon completion of the pyrolysis, the fiber with soot residues is removed from the primary reactor 101 and undergoes a washing step. In this step, the fiber is immersed in deionized water that is absorbed by a carbonaceous matrix remaining on the fiber.
(15) Upon completion of this washing step, the fiber with soot residues and now having adsorbed deionized water returns to the primary reactor 101 for the oxidation step. In this case, the adsorption of deionized water by the fiber provides a homogeneous oxidation. This is due to the fact that, once the fiber is confined again in the primary reactor 101, the fiber is heated to a temperature ranging between 350 C. and 450 C., more specifically 400 C., and it may fluctuate of 15 C., for a period varying between 30 and 40 minutes, thereby occurring the oxidation of the residual carbon still remaining on the fiber surface after the pyrolysis step
(16) Hence, the suggested process 100 allows fiber recovery, maintaining the mechanical and structural characteristics thereof, allowing the reuse of the recovered fiber in several internal applications such as, for instance: tools, jigs and even aircraft parts of less structural import, as well as the marketing of these recovered fibers. The process 100 also allows that the parts used for recycling have a satisfactory size for a good quality of the recovered fiber, not requiring an excessive fiber destruction by trituration at the beginning of the process.
(17) Accordingly,
(18) The spectra of
(19) The amplitude difference, perceived from the intensity of the curve in the spectrum of
(20) The band ratio (ID/IG), perceived in
(21) Although process 100 presents the advantage of recycling composite materials and recovering the fibers of those materials maintaining the mechanical characteristics of that fiber, during the pyrolysis step, when the thermal decomposition of the polymeric matrixes of the composite material takes place, waste gases are expelled and released from the primary reactor 101. Such gases, deriving from composite material degradation, are atmospheric pollutants.
(22) Accordingly, the system for treating waste gases 200 produced by thermal decomposition of composite material matrixes has the function of treating such gasses in order to prevent the expulsion of toxic and/or polluting gases into the atmosphere.
(23) Therefore, as shown in
(24) As shown in
(25) Upon ionization of these gases, the ions follow to a chamber 201, wherein, by controlling the pressure and temperature of the composition, with the aid of the injection of reagent R in the gaseous stream, the ions are combined between them producing molecules of combustible gases C, for instance, hydrogen (H.sub.2) and carbon monoxide (CO), inert gases such as carbon dioxide (CO.sub.2), or neutralizable gases N which are acid or alkaline gases deriving from reactions between hydrogen (H.sup.+) and oxygen (O.sup.2) ions with sulfur (S.sup.2), fluorine (F.sup.), chlorine (Cl.sup.), boron (B.sup.+3) and others.
(26) The produced combustible gases C are burned or oxidized in a combustion chamber 202 with the help of a pilot burner 206, whilst neutralizable gases N are neutralized in a gas washer 203.
(27) Once they are oxidized and washed, the gases are neutralized and prepared to be expelled into the atmosphere. A gas sampling point 207 allows the removal of neutralized gas samples before their passage through an exhaust set.
(28) This exhaust set consists of an exhauster 204 which performs the suction of the neutralized gases and expels them into the atmosphere through a flue 205 associated with the exhauster 204.
(29) As for the plasma, this is characterized for being a source of heat which provides high temperatures (between 2,000 and 15,000 C.) and allows the control of the atmosphere of the environment where it is confined since it does not use a fuel as a source of energy but rather an electric discharge. Therefore, this process represents a suitable manner to process gases and particulates deriving from the thermal decomposition of the components of the composite materials.
(30) The plasma state is known as the fourth state of matter. For instance, if thermal energy is supplied to a block of ice, water (H.sub.2O) in the solid state (1.sup.st state of matter), its molecules will agitate until passing from the solid to the liquid state (2.sup.nd state of matter). By supplying more energy (heat) to this water in the liquid state, its molecules will agitate even more passing to the gaseous state (3.sup.rd state of matter). If more energy is supplied to the water in the gaseous state, its molecules will agitate even more until they separate into ions of its constituting elements (in the case of water, H.sup.+ and O.sup.2), and this is the plasma state of water (4.sup.th state of matter). The plasma state is described as ions dispersed in a fluid. The reactions deriving from an electric discharge in a gaseous medium at pressures higher than the atmospheric pressure promote high temperatures, and this allows rising any gas present in this medium to its plasma state.
(31) Upon a gas being raised to the plasma state, at a controlled atmosphere, it is possible to control a reactor to provide favorable means to the recombination of those ions to produce molecules other than those of the original gas.
(32) The fact that system 200 uses thermal plasma for treating toxic gases produced by the thermal decomposition of composite materials is a differential element introduced by the present development which allows recycling of composite materials and resolves the problem of waste gases produced generates in that recycling, eliminating the environmental liability known to date.
(33) Although a preferred example of embodiment has been described, it should be understood that the scope of the present invention covers other possible variations, being only limited by the content of the attached claims, including thereby the possible equivalents thereof.