Abstract
This research reports the experimental investigation of
single pass filtration of tyre derived fuel and low sulphur diesel blend
using a bench scale two stage micro-molecular filtration set-up. Crude tyre pyrolitic oil obtained from slow pyrolysis of waste tyres was distillated at 250ºC to recover the light to medium fraction from the oil. The distillate was characterized and blended with low sulphur diesel at a volume ratio of 1.5:1 for bench scale filtration tests.
Optimum packing densities for both micro and molecular filter media were determined followed by single pass filtration to evaluate the contaminants removal efficiencies. It was observed that the selected packing density of 168kg/m3 and pattern for micro filter medium can remove up to 2.5μm particle size in the fuel. The 18% reduction in
total sulphur in the fuel after filtration was an indication of liquid
phase mass transfer (molecular filtration) on the active surface of the
molecular sieves.