Environmentally sound destruction of hexabromocyclododecanes in polystyrene insulation foam at commercial-scale industrial waste incineration plants

2017 
Abstract To evaluate factors influencing the destruction efficiency (DE) of hexabromocyclododecanes (HBCDs) in end-of-life extruded polystyrene (XPS) insulation foams, we conducted co-incineration tests at nine commercial-scale industrial waste incineration plants in Japan with various furnace types and with capacities ranging from 70 to 350 t/day. Source materials consisting of 0.34–3.3 wt% of XPS insulation foam (HBCD content, 3.4–5.0 wt%) mixed with baseline industrial wastes were co-incinerated at temperatures of 880–1,210 °C, depending on the plant. HBCD DEs exceeded 99.999% at all the plants (at five plants, the DEs exceeded 99.9999%), with negligible discharge of brominated dioxins and furans. The type of furnace, the incineration temperature, the air pollution control system, and the XPS/waste mixing ratio had no obvious effect on DE. Except at two plants, more than approximately 80% of the total HBCD output was found in the bottom ash, implying that undecomposed HBCDs are discharged unburned into the bottom ash owing to their fire retardancy. HBCD concentrations in bottom ash (
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