containers for disposal of waste materials, used or unused having desired burn properties. The containers have tailored or engineered properties based on material construction so that they are burnable and alter burn properties of the source materials, used or unused, contained therein. The containers may also include cavities into which accelerants, retarders, combustion aids, fuel value enhancing agents, additives to change an ash composition, other additives or the like are added.
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0. 14. A method comprising the steps of:
supplying an engineered burnable container, the engineered burnable container having specific container combustion properties and container post-combustion ash properties including a container fuel value between 6,000 BTU/lb and 20,000 BTU/lb, a container burn rate, and a container post-combustion ash composition including post-combustion metal oxide concentrations and wherein the engineered burnable container is constructed out of cardboard, a polymer material, a plastic reinforced cardboard, a coated cardboard, or mixtures and combinations thereof,
delivering or placing the engineered burnable container to or at a location, wherein a source material is generated wherein the source material is unused harmaceuticals or expired pharmaceuticals,
receiving within the burnable container the source material to form a filled container, wherein the source material has combustion properties and post-combustion ash properties including a source fuel value, a source burn rate, and a source post-combustion ash composition including post-combustion metal oxide concentrations,
wherein each filled container has specific combustion properties and post-combustion ash properties including at least a filled container fuel value, a filled container burn rate, and a filled container resulting ash composition, which have been adjusted, altered, modified, or augmented by the container combustion properties or the container post-combustion ash properties,
retrieving the filled container from the location,
transporting the filled container to a power plant, a cement plant, or a cement kiln,
burning the filled container at the power plant, the cement plant, or the cement kiln as a fuel to generate heat and an ash composition, and
when burning the filled container at a power plant, converting a portion of generated heat into a usable form of energy and wherein the filled containers have minimal ash production, or
when burning the filled container at a cement kiln or cement plant, converting the ash composition into a clinker or cement composition.
1. A method comprising the steps of:
supplying an engineered burnable container comprising:
an interior,
a top,
a bottom,
at least one sidewall, and
at least one opening disposed in the top for depositing a source material into the interior of the container,
wherein the engineered burnable container has specific container combustion properties and container post-combustion ash properties including at least a container fuel value between 6,000 BTU/lb and 20,000 BTU/lb, a container burn rate, a post-combustion ash composition including post-combustion metal oxide concentrations or mixtures thereof and wherein the container is constructed out of cardboard, a polymer material, a plastic reinforced cardboard, a coated cardboard, or mixtures and combinations thereof,
delivering or placing the engineered burnable container or a plurality of the engineered burnable containers to or at a location or locations, wherein a source material is generated or a plurality of source materials are generated wherein the source material is unused pharmaceuticals or expired pharmaceuticals,
filling the interior of each of the containers with the source material or the source materials to form a filled container or filled containers,
retrieving the filled container or the filled containers from the location or the locations,
transporting the filled container or the filled containers to a processing facility comprising a power plant, a cement plant or a cement kiln,
burning the filled container or the filled containers including the engineered burnable container and the source material contained therein as a fuel to generate heat and an ash composition, and
if the processing facility is a power plant, then converting a portion of generated heat into a usable form of energy and wherein the filled containers have minimal ash production, or
if the processing facility is a cement kiln or cement plant, converting the ash composition into a clinker or cement composition,
wherein the source material or the source materials have combustion properties and post-combustion ash properties, wherein each filled container has specific combustion properties and post-combustion ash properties including at least a filled container fuel value, a filled container burn rate, and a filled container resulting ash composition, which have been adjusted, altered, modified, and/or augmented by the engineered burnable container combustion properties and/or the engineered burnable container post-combustion ash properties.
2. The method 1, further comprising the steps of:
post-processing the filled container or the filled containers to alter combustion properties and post-combustion ash properties of the filled containers.
3. The method of
coating the filled container or the filled containers with a coating selected from the group consisting of a water proof coating, a water resistant coating, a solvent resistant coating, a hermetic sealing coating, a gas tight coating, a gas barrier coating, a puncture resistant coating, or a combination of these coatings.
4. The method of
adding components or fillers to the filled container or the filled containers to alter combustion properties and post-combustion ash properties of the filled container or the filled containers.
5. The method of
6. The method of
an exterior coating selected from the group consisting of a water proof coating, a water resistant coating, a solvent resistant coating, a hermetic sealing coating, a gas tight coating, a gas barrier coating, a puncture resistant coating, and a combination of these coatings.
7. The method of
8. The method of
a slot or plurality of pockets, where the slot is adapted to be filled with a compound or the pockets are adapted to be filled with a plurality of compounds to alter the combustion and post-combustion ash properties of the container.
9. The method of
a lid for sealing the container and closing access to the at least one opening, where the lid fits onto the top.
10. The method of
11. The method of
a closing member associated with the top for closing the opening once the container has been filled with a source material or a plurality of source materials.
12. The method of
a liner disposed within an interior of the container.
13. The method of
a receptacle including an opening disposed within an interior of the container so that the container opening and the receptacle opening are aligned.
0. 15. The method of claim 14, wherein when the engineered burnable container is to be burned at a power plant, the engineered burnable container does not include polyvinyl chloride.
0. 16. The method of claim 14, wherein when the engineered burnable container is to be burned at a cement kiln or cement plant, the engineered burnable container includes one or more of silicon, silica, calcium containing compounds, aluminum, aluminum containing compounds, iron, iron alloys, and iron containing compounds.
0. 17. The method of claim 14, wherein when the engineered burnable container is to be burned at a power plant, the engineered burnable container includes a hydrogel, an ionomer, a polyacrylate, a polyacrylamide, or a combination thereof.
0. 18. The method of claim 14, wherein when the engineered burnable container is to be burned at a cement kiln or cement plan, the engineered burnable container includes metal oxides or metal salts.
0. 19. The method of claim 14, wherein the engineered burnable container is coated, sprayed, dipped, or wrapped by a fuel value augmenting material, coating material, or ash composition material.
0. 20. The method of claim 14, wherein the engineered burnable container has sidewalls and a liner having a container fuel value, a container burn rate, or a post-combustion ash composition different from the sidewalls of the engineered burnable container.
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The present application This application is a broadening reissue of U.S. Pat. No. 10,150,613, issued on Dec. 11, 2018, which claims priority to and the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/488,323, filed 20 May 2011 and is related to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/610,331 filed Nov. 1, 2009, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,100,989 issued Jan. 24, 2012; Ser. No. 12/649,215 filed Dec. 29, 2009, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,163,045 issued Apr. 24, 2012; Ser. No. 12/649,230 filed Dec. 29, 2009, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,268,073 issued Sep. 18, 2012; Ser. No. 12/713,733 filed Feb. 26, 2010, and Ser. No. 12/814,251 filed Jun. 11, 2010, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,324,443 issued Dec. 4, 2012, incorporated by reference through the operation of the closing paragraph of the specification.
Embodiments of the present invention relate to containers having desired combustion properties, where the container are designed for having source materials disposed therein for transport to a processing facility.
More particularly, embodiments of the present invention relate to containers for source materials, where the containers have desired combustion properties and/or alter combustion properties of source materials contained therein. In addition to the interior, the containers may also include other cavities into which accelerants, retardants, combustion aids, fuel value enhancing agents, additives to change a post-combustion ash composition, and/or other additives that alter the combustion properties of the container and/or the waste materials contained therein.
Current packaging for source materials such as used and/or waste materials are not designed as a fuel component so that the container and the source materials contained therein can be effectively used as a fuel, with or without post-processing, in industrial processes and/or other processes.
Thus, there is a need in the art for containers for source materials, where the containers are designed to have engineered combustion properties, to alter combustion properties of source materials contained therein and/or to alter post combustion ash compositions of the filled containers.
Embodiments of this invention provide containers for source materials, where the containers are designed to have engineered combustion properties and/or to alter combustion properties of source materials contained therein. In certain embodiments, the containers are made of materials having engineered fuel values (amount of heat generated during combustion) and engineered resulting or post-combustion ash compositions. In other embodiments, the containers may be engineered to generate little or no ash. In other embodiments, the containers may be engineered to generate a specific post-combustion ash composition. In all embodiments, the containers, through a judicious selection of construction materials, may be engineered to have specific combustion properties such as a specific fuel value and/or a specific ash composition. Post-construction additives may be applied to, added to, and/or attached to the containers before or after filling with a source material to alter combustion properties of the container and the source material and/or an resulting ash composition after burning the container and the source material.
Embodiments of this invention also provide molded containers including a source material and a molding composition or a source material and a binding agent to form the molded containers, where the molded containers have desired combustion properties, where a compressing force is to is sufficient so that the molded container retains it shape during transportation and is between about 2 tons per square inch and about 2000 tons per square inch.
Embodiments of this invention provide containers for source materials, where the containers include a sealing coating adapted to isolate any hazardous or potentially hazardous materials contained therein. The types of hazardous or potentially hazardous materials that may be sealed by a sealing coating include new and/or used medical waste, used and/or new veterinary waste, and/or used and/or new healthcare waste, where the sealing coating may be a waterproof coating, a water resistant coating, an air or gas tight coating, an air or gas resistant coating, a solvent resistant coating, and/or other types of resistant coatings. The coating may comprise a single layer or multiple layers. The coatings are designed to either seal the container so that the container is water proof or water resistant, solvent resistant, air/gas tight, or to form a hermetically sealed container (gas and water tight). The coatings may also alter, modify and/or augment the fuel properties of the container on which the coatings are deposited.
Embodiments of this invention provide methods for preparing containers for source materials, where the containers are designed to have desired combustion properties and/or to alter, modify and/or augment the combustion properties of the source materials contained therein. The containers are constructed to include an interior for holding a desired volume of source materials, a means for depositing the source materials into the interior of the container, a means for closing the means for depositing, and, optionally, a means for sealing the container to form a sealed container well suited for transportation to a processing facility. The containers are constructed of one material or generally a plurality of materials so that the container are engineered to have specific combustion properties and post-combustion ash compositions, where these specific combustion properties altering, modifying and/or augmenting the combustion properties and/or post-combustion compositions of the source materials contained within the interior of the container, where the combustion properties are defined in greater detail herein.
Embodiments of this invention provide methods for using containers containing an amount of source material as a fuel, where the methods include depositing source materials into an interior of a container of this invention through an opening in the container to form a filled container, where the volume of the interior is sufficient to be filled with a desired volume of the source materials. Optionally, the methods also include forwarding the filled container to a processing facility, where the filled container may be processed to alter container combustion properties, source materials combustion properties, and/or an ash combustion of the filled container upon combustion. The methods also include forwarding the filled containers and/or the processed filled containers to a combustion facility, where the filled containers and/or the processed filled containers are used as a fuel in the combustion facility and where the combustion facility converts a portion of a fuel value of the filled containers and/or the processed filled containers into a useable form of energy or to use the heat and combustion ash to form a useable product.
The invention may be better understood with reference to the following detailed description together with the appended illustrative drawings in which like elements are numbered the same:
The inventors have found that containers for disposal of source materials can be constructed or constructed and post-processed to have specifically engineered combustion properties and/or a specifically engineered post-combustion ash compositions, where post-processing relates to augmenting the combustion properties of the containers after they are filled with a source material. The containers may include materials and/or components to alter or engineer specific combustion properties of the containers once filled with a source material or materials. The containers may exclude, eliminate or minimize materials and/or components that render the material unfit as a fuel or form an undesirable ash. The containers may also include materials and/or components that change the composition of the ash formed once the containers are burned. The containers may also be constructed or post-processed with materials, structures, and/or components to alter the combustion properties of the source materials contained therein or to alter the resulting ash composition derived from burning a filled container. The containers may also be processed prior to combustion to change the combustion properties of the container and/or the source materials contained therein and/or to change the resulting ash composition of the container and/or the source material contained therein. Thus, the inventors have found that containers may be constructed and/or post-processed to have a dual use: (1) a receptacle for receiving and transporting source materials, and (2) a fuel component along with the source material contained within the container. As a fuel, the containers and the source materials contained therein may significantly reduce landfill requirements for disposing of the filled containers.
Embodiments of this invention broadly relates to containers for source materials, where the containers have specifically engineered combustion properties. In certain embodiments, the engineered containers are constructed from materials having specific combustion properties and a specific post-combustion ash compositions. In other embodiments, the containers are engineered to be clean burning generating little or no ash. In other embodiments, the containers are engineered to generate an engineered ash composition upon combustion. In all embodiments, the containers, through a judicious selection of materials, may be engineered to have specific combustion properties, such as specific fuel value regardless of a composition of the post-combustion ash and vis-a-versa. Post-processing of the filled containers may result in specific alterations of one or more the combustion properties of the filled containers. The containers may also include coatings, liners, inserts, or other components that change, alter, modify and/or augment the combustion properties or resulting ash compositions of the containers and/or of the source materials within the containers. Embodiments of this invention also relate to molded containers for source materials including a source material or plurality of source materials and a molding composition to form the molded containers, where the molded containers have desired combustion properties and/or post-combustion ash compositions.
Embodiments of this invention broadly relate to methods for using containers for depositing source materials, where the containers have desired properties. The containers are constructed to include an interior, a means for depositing source materials into the interior of the container, and a means for closing and/or sealing the means for depositing. The means for depositing may be an opening, an aperture, an openable aperture, and/or any other means for depositing new and/or used source materials into the interior of the container. The means for closing and/or sealing the means for depositing may be a lid, a slidable closing member, a top, a cover, and/or any other closing and/or sealing means. The methods may also include depositing source materials into the interior of the container. The methods may also include sealing the container and sending the container for combustion or post-processing and combustion.
In certain embodiments, the containers may be constructed to be devoid of most metals and inorganic constituents. These containers would find application in power plants or other uses where ash is to be minimized In other embodiments, certain metals, metal oxides or other inorganic constituents may be of use in the ultimate process using the containers and their contents as fuel. Examples of metals, metal oxides, or other inorganic constituents included, without limitation, silicon, silica, calcium containing compounds, aluminum, aluminum containing compounds, iron, iron alloys, and iron containing compounds or other inorganic constituents that may yield a desired post-combustion ash composition or mixtures or combinations thereof. One such process occurs in cement plants, where such ingredients are necessary for the production of a clinker composition or a cement composition, and may therefore be a beneficial addition to the fuel mix.
In other embodiments, the containers are constructed to use specific water absorbing agents, specific moisture absorbing agents and/or specific drying agents. Drying agents or moisture absorbing agents are often added to containers to maintain the contents deposited into the container at a desired dryness. If the containers are to find application as a fuel component in cement plants, then the drying agent may be metal oxides or metal salt drying agents that would be useful in a cement kiln. If instead the desire is to minimize ash upon combustion of the containers such as for use in power plants or other applications that require minimal ash production, then the containers may include water absorbing polymeric materials such as hydrogels, ionomers, polyacrylates, polyacrylamides or other similar water absorbing polymeric materials. Alternatively, the container may be constructed to include removable drying pouches.
In certain embodiments, the containers may be constructed to be prevent metal cans, fasteners, and/or glass containers from being deposited therein.
In other embodiments, the container may be constructed to be substantially or completely devoid of polyvinyl chloride or other polymers that produce undesirable effluents during combustion, especially for use in clean burn facility such as power plants.
In other embodiments, the containers of this invention comprise source materials encased in a burnable matrix and/or compacted and encased in a burnable matrix. The containers may result from the encasing or the encasing material may be injected into an interior of a container filled with a source material.
In other embodiments, the containers of this invention, once filled and returned, may be have a composition injected into the interior of the container, sprayed onto to the exterior of the container, inserted into pockets in the container, attached to the container, or mixtures or combinations of these post-receipt processes, where the post-receipt processes are designed or adapted to alter, modify, and/or augment combustion properties and/or resulting ash compositions of the containers and the contents therein.
The containers of the preent invention may be of any desired shape including, without limitation, a polygonal solid such as a rectangular solid such as a box, a cylinder such as a barrel, a sphere, an ellipsoidal solid, a trapezoidal solid, or any other solid shaped container or combinations thereof.
In certain embodiments, the containers may include sides made of composites such as layer of a paper material and a polymer material. The containers may also be designed to be coated, sprayed, dipped, wrapped, or otherwise partially or completely surrounded by a fuel value augmenting material or coating material or an ash composition augmenting material or coating material. The containers may also be constructed with liners, where the liners have combustion properties that are the same or different from the construction of the walls of the containers. The containers may also to include a separate receptacle disposed within the interior or the container, where the receptacle contains the source material and the receptacle have the same or different combustion properties from the walls of the containers. The container may also include inserts that may be placed inside groove in the container walls, where the inserts have combustion properties that are the same or different from the construction of the walls of the containers. The design of container including additional layers, liners, and/or inserts serves a dual propose: 1) they improve container integrity, safety, and/or security and 2) type alter, optimize and/or augment combustion properties.
Suitable means for depositing include, without limitation, openings, apertures, openable apertures, slidable members, hook-and-loop activated openings, magnetically activated openings, other means for depositing materials into the interior of a container or mixtures or combinations thereof.
Suitable means for closing include, without limitation, lids, tops, covers, slidable members, hook-and-loop activated openings, magnetically activated closings, other closing member and devices, or mixtures or combinations thereof.
Suitable slots, apertures or openings include, without limitation, any shaped slot, opening or aperture. The shapes include, without limitation, circular, ellipsoidal, polygonal such as a triangular slot, a square slot, rectangular slot, a hexagonal slot, etc., or any other slot shape or combinations thereof.
Suitable means for sealing include, without limitation, sealing lids, sealing tops, sealing covers, other sealing members or devices, or mixtures or combinations thereof.
Suitable combustion properties include, without limitation, fuel value, rate of combustion, resulting ash composition, ignition temperature, lowest ignition temperature, highest ignition temperature, average ignition temperature, accelerant content, oxygen content, halogen content, retarder content, inorganic content, container shape, distribution of fuel components, other properties affecting combustion, or mixtures or combinations thereof.
Suitable metal oxide and ceramic drying agents include, without limitation, silicas such as silica gel, aluminas, aluminosilicates, silicoaluminates, molecular sieves, other metal oxide drying agents, other ceramic drying agents, or mixtures or combinations thereof.
Suitable materials out of which the container may be constructed include, without limitation, plastics, rubbers, metals, woods, ceramics, composites, oxidizing agents, or mixtures or combinations thereof. In certain embodiments, the materials include non-halogenated plastics. In other embodiments, the materials include cardboard and wax coated cardboard that have a good fuel value and is often itself derived from secondary wood fiber sources. In certain embodiments, the container of this invention may also include plastic bags disposed in the interior or liners. The bags and/or liners may be of a type that will alter the fuel value of the containers and/or the source material contained in the container.
Suitable source materials include, without limitation, any used or waste material. Exemplary examples of used or waste materials include, without limitation, used or waste industrial materials, used or waste municipal materials, used or waste healthcare materials, used or waste medical materials, used or waste agricultural materials, used or waste biomass materials, used or waste electronic materials, used or waste metal materials, or mixtures or combinations thereof. Used or waste healthcare and used or waste medical waste may include medical waste, generated by people, doctors, doctor offices, clinics, emergency clinics, hospitals, dentists, dentistry clinics and hospitals, veterinarians, veterinary clinics and hospitals, farms, farmer, ranches, ranchers, or producers of used or waste material and/or other facilities that produce used or waste material. These used or waste materials are generally complex mixtures of components including, without limitation, pulp materials, fiber materials, fabric materials, polymer materials, metal materials, ceramic materials, ash materials, other materials and/or mixtures or combinations thereof.
Pulp materials suitable for use herein include, without limitation, wood, wood chips, sawdust, paper, cardboard, and/or mixtures or combinations thereof.
Fiber materials suitable for use herein include, without limitation, natural fibers, synthetic fibers, or the like and mixtures or combinations thereof. Exemplary fibers include, without limitation, inorganic fibers, carbon fibers, boron-nitride fibers, organic fibers, ceramic fibers, glass fibers, any other fibrous material and mixtures or combinations thereof.
Fabric materials suitable for use herein include, without limitation, any natural or synthetic fabric and mixtures or combinations thereof. Exemplary examples include, without limitation, cotton, wool and other fabrics made from animals or plants, RAYON, DACRON, fabric made of polyamides, or any other fabric or mixtures or combinations thereof.
The metal or metallic materials include, without limitation, any metal or metal alloy including a metal from the periodic table of elements. Exemplary examples include, alkali metals (Group 1 metals), alkaline earth metals (Group 2 metals), transition metals (Group 3-12 metals), Lanthanide metals, Actinide metals, post-transition metals, metalloids, or mixtures or combinations thereof. Certain metals and metalloids may be removed prior to use depending on the use to which the burnable fuels is put. The metals may be in any form include fibers, pieces, devices including metals, etc. and mixtures or combinations thereof. Exemplary examples include waste electronic devices. Of course, it should be recognized to one of ordinary skill in the art, that certain metals and metal alloys either pose a health or environmental concerns or issue or process concern or issues. Exemplary examples of such metals or metal alloys would include mercury, cadmium, lead, and thallium and radioactive elements and/or isotopes.
Ceramic materials suitable for use herein include, without limitation, any ceramic material or ceramic containing material or mixtures or combinations thereof. Exemplary examples include, without limitation, electronic substrates, glass, dishes, clay pots, any other object that contains a ceramic material, and mixtures or combinations thereof.
The polymer materials suitable for use herein include, without limitation, plastics, thermoplastics, elastomers, thermoplastic elastomers, resins, and other polymer or polymeric materials and/or mixtures or combinations thereof. In certain embodiments, the polymer materials used in the construction of the container are free or substantially free of chlorine, lead, arsenic or other hazardous components, where substantially means the container should generate less than 500 ppm of these components. In other embodiments, the amount should be less than 250 ppm. In other embodiments, the amount should be less than 100 ppm. In other embodiments, the amount should be less than 50 ppm. In other embodiments, the amount should be less than 25 ppm. In other embodiments, the amount should be less than 10 ppm. In other embodiments, the amount should be less than 1 ppm. In other embodiments, the amount should be less than 500 ppb. In other embodiments, the amount should be less than 250 ppb. In other embodiments, the amount should be less than 100 ppb. In other embodiments, the amount should be less than 50 ppb.
Agricultural materials suitable for use herein include, without limitation, any agricultural waste, any agricultural packaging material and mixtures or combinations thereof.
Biomass materials suitable for use herein include, without limitation, any plant matter that is left over after processing to produce an end product such as sugar cane and sugar beet processing, and mixtures or combination thereof.
Other materials may include, without limitation, chemicals, ash, pharmaceuticals (e.g., unused pharmaceuticals, expired pharmaceuticals, or any other pharmaceutical compositions), ceramics, binding agents, composites materials of one or more of the components set forth above, any other materials and/or mixtures or combinations thereof. The inventors have also found that ash derived from incinerating certain used or waste materials, where the ash still has material or fuel value may be added to the material to change or augment a compositional makeup of the fuel.
In all of the mixtures, polymer materials from other sources of waste, unused and/or virgin polymer materials may be added as binding agents to the material before burning or before forming the material into a desired compact shape followed by combustion of the fuel. The inventors believe that polymer materials act as binders in the shaping process, e.g., pelletizing, and help to increase the combustible nature of the resulting fuel.
The used or waste material may include any mixture or combination of any of the above identified materials.
Suitable virgin and/or unused materials may be any material that has not been used and is added to the input material to change a property of the resulting fuel including altering a fuel value of the material, altering an ash composition of the material, expired pharmaceuticals, altering a fluidity of the material, altering a bulk density of the material, altering the cohesiveness of the material, altering the wettability of the material, or altering other properties or two or more properties of the material or mixtures or combinations thereof.
Suitable coating materials include, without limitation, oils (synthetic oils or natural animal or plant oils), medium to high melting point hydrocarbons, waxes, oligomers, low molecular weight polymers, high molecular weight polymers, resins, thermosetting resins, thermoplastics, elastomers, photo-curable monomers, thermally curable monomers, curable monomers, polymerizable monomers, photo-curable oligomers, thermally curable oligomers, polymerizable oligomers, photo-curable polymers, thermally curable polymers, polymerizable polymers, other materials that may form a desired coating or particle coating on the particulate fuels of this invention or mixture or combinations thereof. The coatings are designed to augment, adjust, change or alter one or more characteristics of the particulate fuel. The coatings may include water proofing coatings, water resistant coatings and/or solvent resistant coatings. These coatings may include, without limitation, polyesters such as MYLAR®, polyolefins, fluorinated polymers, epoxy resins, phenolic resins, acrylates, waxes, latices, neoprene or other chlorinated polymers (provided that the chlorine does not exceed requirements of the facility designed to utilize the container), or mixtures or combinations thereof.
Referring now to
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Referring now to
It should be recognized that a container of this invention may include any combination of design and construction features set forth in
Molded Burnable Containers
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Coating of Sealed Containers
Referring now to
Injection Augmented Filled Containers
Referring now to
Photos of Boxes
Referring now to
Referring now to
The containers of this invention may be constructed of a variety of different materials or mixtures or combinations of different materials to engineer combustion and post-composition ash composition properties. These construction materials have different combustion properties. Thus, by a proper selection of materials and by a proper design of the container, the combustion post-composition ash composition properties of the container as well as the materials contained there in may be adjusted, altered, modified, and/or augmented. Table I includes a list of various construction materials and their combustion properties:
TABLE I
Materials and Additives and Their Associated
Combustion Properties
Fuel Value
Fuel Value
Material
(BTU/lb)
Material
(BTU/lb)
paper
7,200
polystyrene
17,800
cardboard
7,000
rubber
13,450
Premium wood pellets
6,800
nylon
13,625
Seasoned firewood
7,650
PET
10,250
Oven dried switch grass
7,200
Textiles
6,900
Shelled corn @ 15% MC
5,607
Fuel oil #2
19,154
polyethylene (HDPE)
19,000
Fuel oil #6
20,519
polyethylene
12,050
Bituminous coal
13,000
(LLDPE/LLDPE)
polypropylene
19,000
TABLE II
Caloric Values of Various Materials
Fuel Value
Material
kcal/kg
MJ/kg
kW/kg
Bamboo
3,800
15.9
4.4
Braun coal
4,500
18.9
5.2
Cacao shrub
3,300
13.8
3.8
Cardboard
3,800
16.9
4.4
Cardboard corrugated
3,910
16.4
4.5
Citrus peels
4,500
18.9
5.2
China grass
4,030
16.9
4.6
Car tires
8,300
34.8
9.6
Coconut shell
3,800
15.9
4.4
Coffee bean shells
6,000
25.1
6.8
Compost
4,200
17.6
4.8
Cork
6,300
26.4
7.3
Corn
4,400
18.4
5.1
Cotton seeds
3,300
13.8
3.8
Hay
3,200
13.4
3.7
Household waste pre-sorted
4,500
18.9
5.2
Hospital waste
6,780
28.5
7.8
Leather
4,020
16.8
4.6
Manure (dried)
3,760
15.9
4.4
Neoprene
7,100
29.7
8.2
Nylon
7,570
31.7
8.8
Oil sludge
8,800
36.8
10.2
Paper
4,400
18.4
5.1
Paper sludge
3,910
16.4
4.5
Paper coated
6,390
26.8
7.4
Paper adhesive coated
4,200
17.6
4.8
Newspaper
3,910
16.4
4.5
Tar paper
6,390
26.8
7.4
Paraffin
10,340
43.3
12.1
Polyurethan foam
9,770
40.9
11.3
Polyethylene
10,990
46.1
12.7
Polypropylene
11,030
46.2
12.8
Polystyrol EPS
9,800
41.1
11.3
Polystyrol carbon reinforced
10,840
45.4
12.6
Rice pods
2,900
12.1
3.3
Rubber
5,600
23.4
6.5
Sewage sludge (dried)
3,300
13.8
3.8
Sunflower residue
4,200
17.6
4.8
Straw
4,000
17.2
4.6
Tobacco powder
3,000
12.6
3.4
Tar and refinery residues
9,200
38.5
10.7
Tar acid
5,600
23.4
6.5
Textiles
4,000
16.7
4.6
Treated wood
4,500
18.9
5.2
Untreated wood
4,200
17.6
4.8
Plywood
4,500
18.9
5.2
Acacia wood
6,600
27.65
7.4
Cacao shrub
3,300
13.8
3.8
Coconut shells
3,800
15.9
4.4
Coffee bean pods
6,000
25.1
6.8
China grass
4,030
16.9
4.6
Compost
4,200
17.6
4.8
Cork
6,300
26.4
7.3
Corn
4,400
18.4
5.1
Cotton seeds
3,300
13.8
3.8
Eucalyptus wood
7,200
30.1
8.2
Hay
3,200
13.4
3.7
Manure (dried)
3,760
15.9
4.4
Olive oil press residues
7,400
31.0
8.4
Pine cones
7,900
33.1
9
Reeds
4,030
16.9
4.6
Rice pods
2,900
12.1
3.3
Sewage sludge (dried)
3,300
13.8
3.8
Straw
4,000
17.2
4.6
Sunflower residue
4,200
17.6
4.8
Tobacco powder
3,000
12.6
3.4
Untreated wood
4,200
17.6
4.8
TABLE III
Physical and Chemical Properties of Containerized
Pharmaceuticals for Repurposing
Sample
Property (units)
TA2
TA7
TA58
Heat Content (BTUs/lb)
11700
11700
16800
Ash (% wt)
19.3
7.06
5.95
Moisture (% wt)
4.9
10.7
5.6
Sulfur (mg/kg)
1160
1230
5120
Iron (mg/kg)
6490
329
3380
Aluminum (mg/kg)
6180
7440
9770
Calcium (mg/kg)
5790
10300
22500
Arsenic (mg/kg)
1.42
<0.28
<0.251
Barium (mg/kg)
11.7
12.4
5.24
Cadmium (mg/kg)
<0.131
<0.14
<0.125
Chromium (mg/kg)
98.3
20.4
24
Lead (mg/kg)
1.09
0.834
0.4
Selenium (mg/kg)
1.01
<0.28
1.08
Silver (mg/kg)
0.202
<0.14
<0.125
Mercury (mg/kg)
0.332
0.056
0.0257
Chloride (mg/kg)
6030
2560
5550
TABLE IV
Analytical Results from Packaging Components
Total
Lead
Mercury
Product
Solids
(mg/kg)
(mg/kg)
Green Plastic tie
100%
4.18
<0.0099
Red Twist Tie
100%
9.55
<0.010
15 × 20 4 mil Bag
100%
<0.971
0.0105
1 Qt Red Plastic Container
100%
<0.813
<0.010
Liner Box Brown
93.0%
<1.05
0.0251
1 Gallon Sharps Container
100%
<0.990
<0.0102
White Box-outer
94.3%
<1.05
0.0265
18 Gallon Lid
100%
<0.990
<0.0099
Plastic Lids
100%
<0.990
<0.0102
18 Gallon Container
100%
<0.952
<0.0102
6.5 Bucket
100%
<0.980
<0.010
6.5 Lid
99.8%
<0.954
<0.0102
6.5 Inner Lid
100%
<0.990
<0.010
TABLE V
Analytical Sample Preparation of Lead and
Mercury Determination
Solid/Organic
Solid Metals
Product
Metals Digestion
Digestion Hg
Green Plastic tie
50/1.01 grams
50/1.01 grams
Red Twist Tie
50/1.05 grams
50/1.00 grams
15 × 20 4 mil Bag
50/1.03 grams
50/0.98 grams
1 Qt Red Plastic Container
50/1.23 grams
50/1.00 grams
Liner Box Brown
50/1.02 grams
50/0.99 grams
1 Gallon Sharps Container
50/1.01 grams
50/0.98 grams
White Box-outer
50/1.01 grams
50/0.98 grams
18 Gallon Lid
50/1.01 grams
50/1.01 grams
Plastic Lids
50/1.01 grams
50/0.98 grams
18 Gallon Container
50/1.05 grams
50/0.98 grams
6.5 Bucket
50/1.02 grams
50/1.00 grams
6.5 Lid
50/1.05 grams
50/0.98 grams
6.5 Inner Lid
50/1.01 grams
50/1.00 grams
From the data presented above, combustion properties of containers of this invention may be engineered to fuel values between about 6,000 BTU/lb to 20,000 BTU/lb. While the containers may be engineered to have desired fuel values by increasing the amount of high BTU/lb compounds such as polymers, the overall fuel value in BTU/lb of a filled container may be modified by adding into the container high BTU/lb compounds. Thus, the filled containers may have liquid fuels, liquid polymers, powdered polymers, powdered fuels, or mixtures thereof added to the filled containers to increase the fuel value of the filled containers. Additionally, for container designed that have pockets or slots, inserts may be added of high BTU/lb compounds to increase the fuel value of the container. For containers that are coated, the coating may be engineered to improve or retard combustion so that the container starts combusting at an engineered temperatures. The post-combustion ash composition of the container or filled containers may also be altered by added metals or metal oxides to the pockets or slots in the container or added to the interior of the container. By a judicious selection of container construction materials, source material makeup, fill component selection, and container shape and size, the fuel and post-combustion properties of filled and unfilled containers may be altered, modified, and/or augmented. In certain, embodiments, the fuel and post-combustion properties of filled and unfilled containers may be maximized.
All references cited herein are incorporated by reference. Although the invention has been disclosed with reference to its preferred embodiments, from reading this description those of skill in the art may appreciate changes and modification that may be made which do not depart from the scope and spirit of the invention as described above and claimed hereafter.
Gossman, David G., Kunik, Burton J., Berns, James C.
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