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Feedstock & Output Science — The Core Equations

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Feedstock & Output Science — The Core Equations

> Status: Deep research — foundational > Last updated: 2026-03-04 > Core question: What exactly goes into the plasma reactor, what exactly comes out, and in what quantities?

This is the foundational document for The Claw. Every other calculation — energy balance, revenue, storage, logistics, ship layout, port visits, financial projections — derives from the numbers in this document. Get this right and everything else follows. Get this wrong and every downstream calculation is fiction.


Table of Contents

1. What We're Collecting — GPGP Debris Composition 2. The Collectible Feedstock — What Actually Reaches the Reactor 3. Elemental Chemistry — The Atoms We're Working With 4. Per-Polymer Gasification Outputs 5. The GPGP Blend Model — Weighted Composite Output 6. Output Products — What Comes Out and How Much 7. The Blended Energy Balance 8. Contamination Factors — Salt, Water, Biofouling 9. What This Means for Ship Design 10. Confidence Assessment & PoC Validation Targets


1. What We're Collecting — GPGP Debris Composition

1.1 Size Distribution (by mass)

The GPGP contains an estimated 80,000-100,000 metric tonnes of plastic. The North Pacific alone holds approximately 96,400 tonnes (35.8% of global floating plastic, Eriksen et al. 2014).

Size ClassDefinition% by Count% by Mass
Microplastics0.5mm - 5mm~94%~8%
Mesoplastics5mm - 25mm~4%~9%
Macroplastics2.5cm - 50cm~1.5%~33%
Megaplastics>50cm~0.5%~50%
Sources: Lebreton et al. 2018 (Nature Scientific Reports), Eriksen et al. 2014 (PLOS ONE)

Critical insight: Mega-debris (mostly ghost nets) is <1% of particles but ~50% of mass. Microplastics are 94% of particles but only 8% of mass.

1.2 Source Breakdown

A 2022 study found that 75-86% of GPGP plastic originates from ocean-based fishing activities, not land-based consumer waste (Egger et al., Scientific Reports).

Source Category% of Total MassPrimary Polymers
Ghost nets & fishing line~46%Nylon (PA6, PA66), HDPE
Other fishing gear (ropes, floats, crates, traps)~20-30%PP, HDPE, PS foam
Consumer debris (bottles, containers, packaging)~10-15%HDPE, PP, PET
Film plastics (bags, wrappers)~5-8%LDPE, PP
Foam (dock floats, packaging)~3-5%PS (expanded)
Pellets/nurdles~1-2%PE, PP
Sources: Lebreton et al. 2022, Brignac et al. 2019 (Environmental Science & Technology), Ocean Cleanup expeditions

1.3 Polymer Type Breakdown

From Hawaiian marine debris polymer identification studies (the closest comprehensive data to GPGP composition):

Polymer% by Mass (sea surface)Density (g/cm3)Floats?
HDPE26.5%0.94-0.97Yes
PP26.3%0.90-0.91Yes
Nylon (PA6/PA66)22.8%1.13-1.15No (sinks when clean)
PS5-8%1.04-1.06 (solid), 0.01-0.03 (foam)Foam floats, solid sinks
LDPE5-8%0.91-0.94Yes
PET3-5%1.38No (sinks)
PVC2-3%1.30-1.45No (sinks)
Other/blends3-5%VariesVaries
Sources: Brignac et al. 2019, Corniuk et al. 2023 (Marine Pollution Bulletin)

Key observation: Nylon doesn't float on its own — but ghost nets trap air pockets and biofouling creates mixed-buoyancy clumps. That's why ghost nets representing 46% of mass are findable near the surface despite nylon being denser than seawater.

1.4 Depth Stratification

Depth ZoneWhat's FoundCollection Feasibility
Surface (0-0.5m)Fresh PE/PP fragments, foam, some netsAll methods work
Near-surface (0.5-5m)Biofouled plastics, submerged net masses, filmBoom screens, trawls
Sub-surface (5-20m)Heavily biofouled, denser plasticsRequires trawls/pumps
Deep (>20m)PVC, PET, settled microplasticsImpractical for surface vessel
Practical collection depth: 0-5m (Ocean Cleanup System 03 screen depth: 4m). This captures the vast majority of mass-significant debris.

1.5 Density Variation Across the GPGP

ZoneConcentration (kg/km2)
Core hotspots100-1,000+
Inner patch10-100
Outer patch1-10
Boundary<1
At 50 kg/km2 average and 10 TPD target: need to sweep ~200 km2/day. In hotspots (500 kg/km2): only 20 km2. In sparse zones: impractical.


2. The Collectible Feedstock — What Actually Reaches the Reactor

Not everything in the GPGP is collectible or processable. The actual feedstock mix depends on what The Claw can reach (0-5m depth), what the collection systems can handle, and what pre-processing removes.

2.1 Estimated Reactor Feedstock Composition

After collection and pre-processing (dewatering, de-salting, shredding, removal of non-plastic material):

Material% of Dry Reactor FeedBasis
Nylon (PA6/PA66)35-45%Ghost nets are the largest single mass component
HDPE20-25%Dominant floating rigid plastic
PP15-20%Floats, common in fishing gear and packaging
LDPE5-8%Film plastics, bags
PS (foam + solid)3-6%Foam floats prolifically; solid PS less common
PET2-4%Mostly sinks — only biofouled surface PET collected
PVC1-3%Mostly sinks — minimal in surface collection
Other/unknown2-5%Blended polymers, degraded plastics, rubber

2.2 Working Model: "GPGP Standard Feedstock"

For all calculations in this document, we use the following weighted reference blend representing one tonne of reactor-ready feedstock:

ComponentMass (kg per 1,000 kg dry feed)Weight
Nylon (PA6)400 kg40%
HDPE225 kg22.5%
PP175 kg17.5%
LDPE65 kg6.5%
PS45 kg4.5%
PET30 kg3.0%
PVC20 kg2.0%
Other/inerts40 kg4.0%
Total1,000 kg100%
This is the baseline we calculate everything from. If PoC testing reveals different proportions, all downstream numbers update automatically.


3. Elemental Chemistry — The Atoms We're Working With

Every polymer is just carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and chlorine in different arrangements. The elemental composition determines what syngas you get.

3.1 Elemental Composition by Polymer (Virgin)

PolymerChemical FormulaC (wt%)H (wt%)O (wt%)N (wt%)Cl (wt%)HHV (MJ/kg)
HDPE(C₂H₄)n85.714.300046.3
LDPE(C₂H₄)n85.714.300046.3
PP(C₃H₆)n85.714.300046.4
PS(C₈H₈)n92.37.700041.9
PET(C₁₀H₈O₄)n62.54.233.30022.9
Nylon 6(C₆H₁₁NO)n63.79.814.112.4031.0
PVC(C₂H₃Cl)n38.44.80056.7~18.0
Sources: Standard thermodynamic data, ACS Omega 2024, polymer chemistry references

3.2 What Ocean Weathering Does to Elemental Composition

Ocean-weathered plastic differs from virgin polymer:

  • Oxygen content increases: UV exposure + seawater creates carbonyl groups on the surface. O/C ratio rises from near-zero (PE/PP) to 0.001-0.010 after months of exposure (ACS EST 2025).
  • Carbon content decreases slightly: Photodegradation breaks carbon chains, some carbon is lost as CO₂ micro-emissions.
  • Biofouling adds inorganic mass: Barnacles (CaCO₃), algae (organic), biofilm add 5-15% mass that is NOT plastic. This becomes ash/slag in the reactor.
  • Salt loading: NaCl crystals embedded in surface pores. Estimated 1-5% of total mass after dewatering but before washing.
  • Heavy metal sorption: Plastics accumulate metals from seawater over time (Rochman et al. 2014). After 12 months: Zn, Cd, Pb, Cr, Mn, Co, Ni all increase. HDPE accumulates less than other polymers. PVC is worst — acts as both source and sink for metals.

3.3 Blended Elemental Composition — GPGP Standard Feedstock

Applying the 40/22.5/17.5/6.5/4.5/3/2/4 blend from Section 2.2:

ElementCalculationwt% in Blend
Carbon(0.40×63.7)+(0.225×85.7)+(0.175×85.7)+(0.065×85.7)+(0.045×92.3)+(0.03×62.5)+(0.02×38.4)73.6%
Hydrogen(0.40×9.8)+(0.225×14.3)+(0.175×14.3)+(0.065×14.3)+(0.045×7.7)+(0.03×4.2)+(0.02×4.8)11.7%
Oxygen(0.40×14.1)+(0.03×33.3)6.6%
Nitrogen(0.40×12.4)5.0%
Chlorine(0.02×56.7)1.1%
Other/ashInerts, biofouling residue, salt2.0%
Key takeaway: The GPGP feedstock is ~73.6% carbon and ~11.7% hydrogen — extremely energy-dense. But the 5% nitrogen (from nylon) and 1.1% chlorine (from PVC) create complications:
  • Nitrogen → NOx in combustion, HCN in syngas (must be scrubbed)
  • Chlorine → HCl in syngas (poisons methanol catalysts, corrodes equipment)

3.4 Blended Higher Heating Value

ComponentWeightHHV (MJ/kg)Contribution
Nylon0.4031.012.40
HDPE0.22546.310.42
PP0.17546.48.12
LDPE0.06546.33.01
PS0.04541.91.89
PET0.03022.90.69
PVC0.02018.00.36
Other0.040~15.00.60
Total1.00037.5 MJ/kg
The GPGP standard feedstock has a blended HHV of ~37.5 MJ/kg. This is lower than pure PE/PP (46 MJ/kg) because nylon at 31 MJ/kg drags the average down. But it's still comparable to crude oil (42-47 MJ/kg) and far above coal (24-35 MJ/kg) or MSW (10-15 MJ/kg).


4. Per-Polymer Gasification Outputs

What each polymer produces when plasma-gasified. Data from published studies at temperatures relevant to PRRS/PAWDS operation (1,200-1,800°C for plasma, 850-1,000°C for downstream gas processing).

4.1 PE/HDPE — The Best Feedstock

MetricValueConditionsSource
Syngas yield3.2-3.3 Nm³/kgSteam, 900°C, S/P=1.0PMC 2023 review
H₂ content58-62% volSteam gasificationMultiple studies
CO content27% volSteam gasificationPMC 2023
CH₄7-8% volSteam, 900°CPMC 2023
CO₂2-3% volSteam, 900°CPMC 2023
H₂/CO ratio~2.1-2.3Steam gasificationCalculated
LHV of syngas16.2 MJ/Nm³PMC 2023
Carbon conversion93.6%S/P=2, 900°CSpouted bed study
Slag/residue<10 kg/tonneNearly pure hydrocarbonEstimated
Key: PE is almost perfect for methanol synthesis — H₂/CO ratio naturally near 2.0 without needing Water-Gas Shift. Highest energy yield of any plastic.

4.2 PP — Nearly Identical to PE

MetricValueConditionsSource
Syngas yield3.4-4.2 Nm³/kgPlasma, steamMultiple studies
H₂ content34-49% volVaries with conditionsPlasma studies 2024
CO content4-22% volHighly condition-dependentMultiple
H₂/CO ratio0.63-3.81Tunable with conditionsScienceDirect 2024
HHV of syngas19.3-25.8 MJ/Nm³Dual FBRPMC 2023
Slag/residue<10 kg/tonneNearly pure hydrocarbonEstimated
Key: PP behaves very similarly to PE. At plasma temperatures, both polyolefins fully decompose to H₂ + CO. The wide H₂/CO range shows sensitivity to reactor design — at PRRS plasma temperatures (>1,200°C), expect convergence toward PE-like ratios.

4.3 PS — Good but Less Hydrogen

MetricValueSource
H₂ potential53% (vs 60-62% for PE/PP)Energy & Fuels 2023
Syngas yieldLower than polyolefinsComparative studies
Notable behaviorHigher aromatic content in syngasDue to benzene ring structure
Slag/residue<15 kg/tonneMinor inorganic
Key: PS produces less H₂ than polyolefins due to its aromatic ring structure. The benzene ring tends to survive as tar at lower temperatures — but at plasma temperatures (>1,200°C), even aromatics fully crack. PS is only 4.5% of the blend, so its impact is minor.

4.4 PET — The Oxygen-Heavy Outlier

MetricValueConditionsSource
H₂ content22-53% volVaries widely with processMultiple studies
CO content25% volAir gasification, optimalScienceDirect 2021
CO₂ contentHIGH — dominant productDistinctive PET behaviorWaste Management 2021
H₂ yield93 g/kg-feedOptimal conditionsPubMed
CO yield418 g/kg-feedOptimal conditionsPubMed
Slag/residue~15-20 kg/tonneHigher than polyolefinsEstimated
Key: PET is 33% oxygen by weight — this means a large fraction of the carbon ends up as CO₂ rather than useful CO. Much lower energy recovery than polyolefins. But PET is only 3% of the GPGP blend, so its negative impact is diluted.

4.5 Nylon (PA6/PA66) — The Wild Card (40% of Feed!)

Nylon is the single largest component of the GPGP feedstock by mass. Its gasification behavior is critical but less studied than polyolefins.

MetricValueSource
HHV31.0 MJ/kgStandard data
C content63.7%Molecular formula
N content12.4%Molecular formula — THIS IS THE CONCERN
Expected H₂/CO ratio~1.2-1.8Estimated from composition
Nitrogen fateHCN, NH₃, N₂ in syngasGasification chemistry
Slag/residue~20-30 kg/tonneHigher than polyolefins
The nitrogen problem: When nylon gasifies, the 12.4% nitrogen has to go somewhere:
  • N₂ (molecular nitrogen) — harmless, inert diluent in syngas
  • NH₃ (ammonia) — can be scrubbed, potentially valuable
  • HCN (hydrogen cyanide) — toxic, must be removed before combustion or synthesis
  • NOx (nitrogen oxides) — if syngas is burned, NOx emissions are a regulatory concern
At plasma temperatures (>1,200°C), nitrogen primarily forms N₂ and HCN. Below 1,000°C, more NH₃ forms. Either way, the syngas cleaning system must handle nitrogen compounds.

The energy discount: Nylon has 31 MJ/kg vs 46 MJ/kg for PE/PP — a 33% reduction. Since nylon is 40% of the feed, this significantly impacts the blended energy balance.

4.6 PVC — The Poison (Only 2% but Dangerous)

MetricValueSource
HCl generation58.3 wt% of PVC mass becomes HClPMC 2023
Cl content56.7% by weightMolecular formula
Syngas qualityPoor — low yield, high HCl contaminationMultiple
Oil yieldOnly 12.8 wt%Vacuum pyrolysis study
At 2% of feedstock (20 kg per tonne):
  • HCl generated: ~11.7 kg per tonne of feedstock
  • This is manageable with standard acid gas scrubbing (NaOH solution)
  • But if PVC content rises above ~5%, it becomes a serious corrosion and emission problem
  • Pre-sorting to remove PVC is highly recommended — FTIR sorting can identify PVC items

4.7 Summary Table — Per-Polymer Gasification Performance

PolymerSyngas Yield (Nm³/kg)H₂ (vol%)CO (vol%)H₂/COLHV (MJ/Nm³)Problems
HDPE3.2-3.358-6227~2.216.2None — ideal
LDPE3.2-3.358-6227~2.216.2None — ideal
PP3.4-4.234-494-22Tunable19.3-25.8Condition-sensitive
PS2.5-3.0~53~20~2.6~14Lower H₂, tar at low T
PET1.5-2.022-5325Variable~12High CO₂, low energy
Nylon 62.5-3.0~45~25~1.5-1.8~14N compounds in syngas
PVC1.0-1.5LowLowN/ALow58% HCl — toxic
Values marked with asterisk are estimates based on elemental composition, analogous polymer behavior, and thermodynamic modeling. Exact per-polymer data for nylon and PS plasma gasification is sparse in the literature — this is a gap the PoC should address.


5. The GPGP Blend Model — Weighted Composite Output

5.1 Methodology

We weight each polymer's gasification outputs by its mass fraction in the GPGP Standard Feedstock (Section 2.2) to predict the composite syngas from a representative tonne of GPGP plastic.

5.2 Blended Syngas Composition (Theoretical)

Weighting the per-polymer data by the GPGP blend (40% nylon, 22.5% HDPE, 17.5% PP, 6.5% LDPE, 4.5% PS, 3% PET, 2% PVC):

ComponentWeighted Vol%Notes
H₂48-53%Nylon drags down from PE/PP's 58-62%
CO24-28%Relatively stable across polymers
CO₂5-10%PET and nylon contribute more CO₂
CH₄3-6%Mostly from PE/PP at moderate temperatures
N₂/NH₃/HCN2-5%From nylon's 12.4% nitrogen
HCl<0.5%From PVC (small component)
H₂OBalanceVaries with steam injection

5.3 Blended H₂/CO Ratio

ScenarioH₂/CO RatioNotes
Best case (high-temp plasma, steam optimization)~1.9-2.1Approaches ideal for methanol
Expected case (standard PRRS operation)~1.6-1.8Needs moderate WGS correction
Conservative case (lower temp, poor mixing)~1.3-1.5Needs significant WGS
Comparison to pure PE/PP gasification: Pure polyolefins give H₂/CO of ~2.0-2.3 naturally. The GPGP blend is lower primarily because nylon's nitrogen displaces some hydrogen in the output gas. The existing ACS Omega 2024 data showing H₂/CO of 1.42 for "mixed plastic waste" is consistent with our model.

5.4 Blended Syngas Yield

MethodYield per tonne dry feedstock
By volume~2.7-3.0 Nm³/kg = 2,700-3,000 Nm³/tonne
By energy~37,500 MJ × 0.81 efficiency = 30,375 MJ usable per tonne
As electricity (35% gas engine)~2,950 kWh/tonne
As electricity (45% combined cycle)~3,800 kWh/tonne

5.5 Comparison: GPGP Blend vs Pure Polyolefins vs MSW

FeedstockHHV (MJ/kg)Syngas yield (Nm³/kg)H₂/COkWh electricity/tonne
Pure PE/PP46.33.2-3.32.0-2.3~3,700-4,200
GPGP blend37.52.7-3.01.6-1.8~2,950-3,800
Municipal solid waste10-150.8-1.20.8-1.2~700-1,000
Crude oil (reference)42-47
The GPGP blend is 2.5-3.5x better than MSW as gasification feedstock. The nylon content hurts compared to pure polyolefins, but the blend is still an excellent energy source — closer to fossil fuels than to garbage.


6. Output Products — What Comes Out and How Much

For a 10 TPD processing rate (10,000 kg dry feedstock per day):

6.1 Syngas Production

MetricDaily Output
Syngas volume27,000-30,000 Nm³/day
Energy content303,750 MJ/day (84,375 kWh/day)
H₂ mass~800-1,100 kg/day
CO mass~3,000-3,800 kg/day

6.2 Electricity Generation (Path A: Burn It All)

Conversion MethodGross GenerationShip ConsumptionNet Surplus
Gas engine (35% eff.)29,500 kWh/day (1,230 kW)~13,000-17,000 kWh/day12,500-16,500 kWh/day
Combined cycle (45% eff.)38,000 kWh/day (1,583 kW)~13,000-17,000 kWh/day21,000-25,000 kWh/day
Ship consumption includes: plasma torch (5,700-11,400 kWh), shredders (500), dewatering (800), conveyors (200), collection systems (2,000), vessel operations (1,500), gas cleaning (1,000), crew systems (500).

The energy loop closes comfortably at 10 TPD. Even with gas engines (simpler, cheaper), there's 520-690 kW of surplus. With combined cycle, surplus is 875-1,040 kW.

At 5 TPD: Marginal. Gas engines produce ~14,750 kWh/day, consumption is ~10,000-13,000 kWh/day. Surplus is only 150-500 kW — tight, needs diesel backup.

6.3 Methanol Production (Path B: Burn Some, Convert Rest)

If we divert the surplus syngas (beyond what's needed for ship power) to methanol synthesis:

Metric10 TPD5 TPD
Syngas available for methanol~40-55% of total~10-25% of total (tight)
Methanol yield (conservative: 0.8 kg per kg plastic diverted)3,200-5,500 kg/day400-1,250 kg/day
Annual methanol1,170-2,000 tonnes/year146-456 tonnes/year
Revenue at $450/t (commodity)$525K-900K/year$66K-205K/year
Revenue at $1,200/t (green premium)$1.4M-2.4M/year$175K-547K/year
The methanol numbers confirm: At 5 TPD, methanol production is barely worth the equipment cost. At 10 TPD, it starts making financial sense, especially if green methanol pricing holds.

Critical H₂/CO constraint: Our blended H₂/CO of 1.6-1.8 needs WGS correction to reach 2.0 for methanol. This is a modest shift — about 10-20% of CO needs to be converted via Water-Gas Shift reaction. Energy cost is minimal (WGS is exothermic) but adds equipment complexity.

6.4 Slag and Solid Residues

OutputAmount per Tonne FeedDaily at 10 TPDAnnual
Vitrified slag20-60 kg200-600 kg73-219 tonnes
Scrubber residue (from HCl, particulates)5-15 kg50-150 kg18-55 tonnes
Scrubbed salt (NaCl from dewatering)10-50 kg100-500 kg37-183 tonnes
Slag properties: Inert, non-leaching vitrified glass. Can be used as construction aggregate or road fill. At 10 TPD, slag generation is only 200-600 kg/day — a single standard cargo tank (50-100 m³) could hold years of slag.

Scrubber residue: Contains captured HCl (neutralized to NaCl by NaOH scrubber), particulates, and trace heavy metals. Classified as hazardous waste — needs proper disposal at port. Volume is small (~1-3 drums per day).

6.5 Complete Mass Balance — One Tonne of GPGP Feedstock

INPUT:  1,000 kg GPGP Standard Feedstock (dry)
        + 200-500 kg steam (for gasification)
        + 10-20 kWh plasma torch energy (startup only)

OUTPUT: ├── SYNGAS: ~850-920 kg total gas │ ├── H₂: 80-110 kg (most valuable) │ ├── CO: 300-380 kg (fuel or methanol feedstock) │ ├── CO₂: 100-200 kg (waste, but from WGS can shift more CO) │ ├── CH₄: 30-60 kg (burns as fuel) │ ├── N compounds: 20-50 kg (from nylon, scrubbed) │ ├── HCl: ~1-2 kg (from PVC, scrubbed) │ └── H₂O: 200-400 kg (from steam + combustion) │ ├── SLAG: 20-60 kg vitrified glass (inert solid) │ ├── SCRUBBER WASTE: 5-15 kg (hazardous, drums) │ └── SALT: 10-50 kg NaCl (from pre-processing wash)


7. The Blended Energy Balance

7.1 Energy In vs Energy Out

StageEnergy (MJ) per tonneNotes
Chemical energy in feedstock37,500HHV of GPGP blend
Gasification efficiency× 0.8181% of energy captured in syngas
Syngas energy content30,375Available for conversion
Gas engine efficiency× 0.35Or 0.45 for combined cycle
Gross electricity10,631 kWh13,669 kWh with combined cycle
Internal consumption-1,300 to -1,700 kWhTorch, shredders, systems
Net electricity per tonne8,931-9,331 kWh11,969-12,369 kWh (combined cycle)

7.2 Self-Sufficiency Ratio

Processing RateGross Generation (kWh/day)Consumption (kWh/day)Ratio
5 TPD (gas engine)14,75010,000-13,0001.13-1.48
5 TPD (combined cycle)18,96010,000-13,0001.46-1.90
10 TPD (gas engine)29,50013,000-17,0001.74-2.27
10 TPD (combined cycle)38,00013,000-17,0002.24-2.92
A ratio >1.0 means self-sustaining. At 10 TPD, even the simplest conversion (gas engines) generates 1.7-2.3x what the ship needs. The surplus can power methanol synthesis, desalination, or other productive loads.

7.3 What About the 35% Nylon Penalty?

If the feedstock turns out to be 50% nylon (worst case for ghost-net-heavy areas):

  • Blended HHV drops from 37.5 to ~35.5 MJ/kg (~5% reduction)
  • Self-sufficiency ratio at 10 TPD: still 1.65-2.15 (gas engine)
  • Still closes the energy loop. The nylon penalty is real but not fatal.
If feedstock is only 30% nylon (lighter ghost-net areas, more rigid consumer debris):

  • Blended HHV rises to ~39 MJ/kg
  • Self-sufficiency ratio improves to 1.82-2.37
  • More surplus for methanol production.

8. Contamination Factors — Salt, Water, Biofouling

8.1 Moisture Content

StageMoisture LevelEnergy Cost to Remove
As collected from ocean50-70% water by weight
After mechanical dewatering (centrifuge/press)20-30%~50 kWh/tonne wet mass
After thermal drying (waste heat)5-10%~157 kWh/tonne (latent heat)
Reactor-ready<5%
Key: The energy to remove water (~200 kWh/tonne) is already included in the "internal consumption" line of the energy balance. Using waste heat from the reactor for drying is essentially free.

8.2 Salt Loading

  • Ocean plastic accumulates NaCl in surface pores and between polymer layers
  • After dewatering: estimated 1-5% of dry mass is salt
  • Impact on gasification: NaCl decomposes at plasma temperatures to Na and Cl₂. Sodium reports to slag (binds with silica). Chlorine reports to syngas as HCl.
  • Additional HCl from salt: At 3% salt loading, adds ~1.8 kg Cl per tonne feedstock → ~1.8 kg HCl
  • Combined with PVC-derived HCl: total ~3-14 kg HCl per tonne
  • Manageable with standard NaOH wet scrubbing. Budget for 200-500 kg NaOH per month at 10 TPD.

8.3 Biofouling Mass

  • Barnacles, algae, biofilm add 5-15% mass to ocean plastic
  • Barnacles are primarily CaCO₃ → becomes CaO slag in reactor (actually helps flux the slag)
  • Algae is organic carbon → contributes to syngas (minor positive)
  • Biofilm is negligible
  • Net impact: Slight increase in slag volume (maybe +10-20 kg/tonne), slight decrease in average HHV. Already within our 20-60 kg/tonne slag estimate.

8.4 Heavy Metals

From Rochman et al. 2014 (12-month ocean deployment study):

  • All five polymer types (PET, HDPE, PVC, LDPE, PP) accumulate metals over time
  • Zn, Cd, Pb, Cr, Mn, Co, Ni, Fe, Al all detected after 12 months
  • Concentrations did NOT reach saturation for most metals/polymers — still increasing at 12 months
  • HDPE accumulates the least metals
  • PVC accumulates the most (acts as both source and sink)
  • Extreme case: up to 698,000 μg/g Pb from a PVC object (PLOS ONE 2018)
Impact on gasification: At plasma temperatures, heavy metals report to the slag (they're involatile). The vitrification process locks them in a non-leaching glass matrix — this is actually one of the selling points of plasma gasification. The metals are safely immobilized.

Impact on syngas quality: Trace metals in the syngas are captured by the scrubbing system. For methanol synthesis, the syngas must be cleaned to <0.1 ppm of metals, sulfur, and chlorine. This is standard industrial practice.

8.5 Adjusted Energy Balance with Contamination

Applying contamination penalties to the baseline:

FactorEnergy PenaltyBasis
Moisture removal-200 kWh/tonneDrying from 30% to 5%
Salt decomposition-20 kWh/tonneMinor endothermic NaCl dissociation
Biofouling inerts-5% of HHVNon-combustible mass displaces plastic
Total contamination penalty~15-20%Compared to pure dry polymer
After all contamination adjustments:
  • Effective HHV: ~31-34 MJ/kg (vs 37.5 clean)
  • At 10 TPD with gas engines: ~24,800 kWh generation vs ~15,000 kWh consumption
  • Self-sufficiency ratio: 1.65 — still solidly positive

9. What This Means for Ship Design

9.1 Storage Requirements

Product/MaterialDaily Volume (10 TPD)Monthly VolumeStorage Solution
Methanol (if producing)3.2-5.5 m³/day96-165 m³/monthDedicated tank, 200+ m³
Slag0.1-0.3 m³/day3-9 m³/monthCargo tank, 50 m³ lasts 6-17 months
Scrubber waste2-3 drums/day60-90 drums/monthHazmat storage area
NaOH (scrubber reagent)7-17 kg/day200-500 kg/monthChemical tank, 2 m³
Diesel (backup)0 during operation500-1,000 L reserveExisting fuel tanks
Feedstock buffer10-20 tonnesCollection staging area

9.2 Gas Cleaning System Requirements

The syngas from GPGP feedstock needs to be cleaned of: 1. HCl (from PVC + salt): 3-14 kg/tonne → NaOH wet scrubber 2. HCN (from nylon): 5-20 kg/tonne → Catalytic hydrolysis or water scrubber 3. NH₃ (from nylon): 5-15 kg/tonne → Water scrubber (potentially recoverable as ammonium salt) 4. Particulates/tar: At plasma temperatures, minimal tar. Cyclone separator + baghouse filter. 5. Heavy metals: Trace amounts, captured by scrubber system. 6. H₂S: Minimal from this feedstock (no significant sulfur source). <1 ppm expected.

For Path A (burn in gas engines): Basic scrubbing is sufficient. Gas engines tolerate some contaminants.

For Path B (methanol synthesis): Much stricter cleaning required. Must reach <0.1 ppm S, <0.1 ppm Cl, <0.5 ppm metals before the catalyst bed.

9.3 Equipment Implications

DecisionPath A (Burn All)Path B (Methanol)
Syngas cleaningBasic (scrubber + filter)Advanced (multi-stage + guard beds)
Power generation2× gas engines (~600 kW each)1× gas engine + methanol reactor
Additional equipmentNoneWGS reactor + methanol reactor + distillation + compressor
Deck spaceMinimal+40-60 m² for methanol module
StorageSlag bins onlyMethanol tanks + slag bins
CAPEX impactBaseline+$5-15M
ComplexityLowHigh
Revenue streamsPlastic credits onlyPlastic credits + methanol sales

9.4 Supply Vessel Requirements

ScenarioOutbound to GPGPInbound to HonoluluFrequency
Path ACrew, food, diesel, NaOH, consumablesCrew (off-rotation), scrubber waste drumsEvery 28 days
Path BSame + empty ISO tanksSame + full methanol ISO tanks (~100-150 tonnes)Every 28 days
Path B supply vessel needs: Methanol-rated ISO tank capacity. A standard 20-ft ISO tank holds ~24 tonnes of methanol. Monthly production at 10 TPD: ~100-170 tonnes = 4-7 ISO tanks per month. A medium supply vessel can carry 6-8 ISO tanks.


10. Confidence Assessment & PoC Validation Targets

10.1 What We're Confident About (±10%)

ParameterConfidenceBasis
GPGP polymer compositionHIGHMultiple expeditions, 1000s of samples
Elemental composition of each polymerVERY HIGHFundamental chemistry
HHV of blended feedstockHIGHWeighted average of known values
PE/PP gasification yieldsHIGHDozens of published studies
Energy loop closes at 10 TPDHIGHMath works even with 20% contamination penalty

10.2 What We're Moderately Confident About (±25%)

ParameterConfidenceGap
Nylon gasification yieldsMODERATELimited plasma gasification data for PA6
Blended syngas compositionMODERATENo studies on GPGP-specific feedstock mix
H₂/CO ratio of blendMODERATESensitive to nylon fraction and reactor conditions
Salt impact on syngas qualityMODERATELab data exists but not at GPGP salt levels
Energy loop at 5 TPDMODERATEMargins are thin

10.3 What We Don't Know (PoC Must Answer)

QuestionWhy It MattersPoC Stage
Actual syngas from real GPGP plasticEverything downstream depends on thisStage 2: PyroGenesis bench test
Nylon gasification performance at PRRS temps40% of feed, limited dataStage 2
Salt impact on electrode lifeNaCl at plasma temps is corrosiveStage 2-3
Mixed polymer interaction effectsDo polymer combinations create unexpected products?Stage 2
Tar formation from ghost net materialNylon/HDPE nets may behave differently than pelletsStage 2
Methanol catalyst poisoning from real feedstockCan syngas be cleaned enough?Stage 3
HCN/NH₃ scrubbing effectivenessCritical for emissions compliance and safetyStage 2-3
Continuous feed with tangled/variable materialLab pellets ≠ ocean debris with barnaclesStage 3

10.4 Validation Metrics for PoC

When the Stage 2 bench test processes real GPGP plastic at PyroGenesis Montreal, these are the specific numbers to measure:

MetricExpected RangeGO/NO-GO ThresholdKill Criterion
Syngas yield2.7-3.0 Nm³/kg>2.0 Nm³/kg<1.5 Nm³/kg
H₂ content48-53 vol%>35 vol%<25 vol%
CO content24-28 vol%>15 vol%<10 vol%
H₂/CO ratio1.6-1.8>1.2<0.8
HCl in raw syngas0.1-0.5 vol%<2 vol%>5 vol%
HCN in raw syngas<1 vol%<3 vol%>5 vol%
Carbon conversion>85%>70%<50%
Slag qualityNon-leaching (TCLP pass)TCLP passTCLP fail
Net energy>8,500 kWh/t>5,000 kWh/t<3,000 kWh/t
If the PoC numbers fall within the "Expected Range" column, every calculation in this document is validated and the project proceeds with high confidence.

If they fall between "Expected" and "GO/NO-GO", the project proceeds with design adjustments.

If any hit a "Kill Criterion", that specific subsystem needs fundamental rethinking.


Sources & References

GPGP Composition

  • Lebreton, L. et al. (2018). "Evidence that the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is rapidly accumulating plastic." Nature Scientific Reports, 8(1), 4666.
  • Eriksen, M. et al. (2014). "Plastic pollution in the world's oceans." PLOS ONE, 9(12), e111913.
  • Egger, M. et al. (2022). "First evidence of plastic fallout from the North Pacific Garbage Patch." Scientific Reports, 10(1), 7495.
  • Brignac, K. et al. (2019). "Marine Debris Polymers on Main Hawaiian Island Beaches, Sea Surface, and Seafloor." Environmental Science & Technology, 53(21), 12218-12226.
  • Corniuk, R. et al. (2023). "Polymer identification of floating derelict fishing gear from O'ahu, Hawai'i." Marine Pollution Bulletin, 195, 115363.

Gasification Performance

  • ACS Omega (2024). Plasma gasification of plastic waste — syngas composition and system efficiency.
  • PMC (2023). "A review on gasification and pyrolysis of waste plastics." Frontiers in Chemistry, 10, 960894.
  • Energy & Fuels (2023). "Hydrogen/Syngas Production from Different Types of Waste Plastics." ACS Energy & Fuels.
  • ScienceDirect (2024). "Multiple benefits of polypropylene plasma gasification." Fuel, 2024.
  • Waste Management (2021). "PET recycling via steam gasification." Waste Management, 130, 1-11.
  • ACS IEC Research (2022). "Design and Simulation of a Plastic Waste to Methanol Process." IEC Research, 62(13).

Contamination & Weathering

  • Rochman, C. et al. (2014). "Long-term sorption of metals is similar among plastic types." PLOS ONE, 9(1), e85433.
  • Holmes, L. et al. (2018). "Macro and micro plastics sorb and desorb metals." PLOS ONE, 13(1), e0191759.
  • ACS EST (2025). "Weathering Process and Characteristics of Microplastics in Coastal Wetlands."

Energy Balance

  • Westinghouse/NETL. Plasma gasification energy balance data.
  • Utashinai Plant (Japan). Operational data — 54% energy export ratio on MSW feedstock.
  • Hurlburt Field (US Air Force). PAWDS operational data — 420 kW from 8.5 TPD.