Recycling Engine Coolant
Recycling Engine Coolant
Recycling Engine Coolant
Presented at the NORA 2002 Annual Recycling Conference & Trade Show
Ernst Schmidt, Director
Liquid Technology and Services
EET Corporation
830 Corridor Park Blvd. Suite 200
Knoxville, TN 37932
865.671.7800
www.eetcorp.com
INTRODUCTION
Approximately 2 billion pounds of concentrated antifreeze is produced in North America each
1
year. About 80 percent of this is sold to refill leaking cooling systems ; an estimated 7 percent is
used for factory fill and 13 percent for coolant change-out. The amount of coolant changed-out is
available for recycling or discharged to the sanitary sewer (See Figure 1). An overview of the
composition and use of antifreeze (engine coolant) will be presented as well as a brief functional
examination of the heavy-duty cooling system. A review and analysis of small and large scale
commercially available antifreeze recycling methods will be presented.
Glycol based products have been used for many years to lower the freeze temperature and raise
the boiling point of engine coolant. The glycol additive package provides cooling system
corrosion protection. The majority of antifreezes in use today are based on ethylene glycol (EG),
but propylene glycol (PG) products are becoming more common. EG products are less expensive
than PG products, although PG products are less toxic. Engine-related applications of PG are
usually found when environmental concerns have disallowed the use of the more common, EG
products.
Figure 1
THE COOLING SYSTEM
Regardless of glycol type, engine coolant serves three main functions in a vehicle. These
functions are heat transfer, freeze/boil-over and corrosion protection. Water is an excellent
conductor of heat, but glycols are not as efficient, and so as a result, as the concentration of
glycol increases, the heat transfer coefficient of the mixture decreases. To allow optimum heat
transfer, modern engines are designed to run with a glycol/water blend of between 40/60 to 60/40
percent by volume, and so maintaining a fluid within the design parameters is important. Use of
full strength antifreeze is not recommended because it leads to high engine operating
temperatures and additive drop out that in turn causes plugging of cooling system passages and
damaged water pump seals. The quality of water used to make-up an engine coolant is critical to
ensure long cooling system and engine life, and deionized or distilled water is recommended.
Heavy-duty (HD) diesel engines require different coolant chemistry than gasoline engines to
protect wet sleeve liners from pitting. To improve heat transfer and aid in serviceability, many HD
engines incorporate wet sleeve liners. Under extreme stress of operation these liners vibrate.
This vibration creates vapor bubbles that implode against the liners outer surface. This action,
called cavitation, can quickly eat a tiny hole in the liner allowing coolant to leak into the
crankcase. Because of this problem, HD coolants must contain a special nitrite inhibitor, extra
defoamer and buffers. These compounds are termed Supplemental Coolant Additives (SCAs).
USED ENGINE COOLANT
The recyclable components in used engine coolant are glycols and, for non-distillation
techniques, water. Contaminants that either disqualify coolant or otherwise affect potential for
economical recovery include engine gear and heating oil, gasoline, diesel, turbine fuel and
kerosene, brake, transmission and hydraulic fluids, ammonia, and solvents. When the water
concentration exceeds 70% recycling is usually not cost effective. Pollutant concentrations will
vary in recycler feed stock and consistent operation cannot be maintained without reasonable
quality control and an understanding of process limitations. Typical ranges of individual pollutants
and undepleted additives in recycler feedstock are shown in Table 1. In the late 1960s and early
1970s toxicity and environmental concerns resulted in the elimination of chromate and arsenic
2
from thermal transfer fluids . Used coolant from an individual vehicle can exceed these upper
level concentrations by 5 times.
Table 1
Composition of Recycler Feed-Stock
1
Parameter
Ethylene Glycol, %
Water, %
Conductivity, PS/cm
pH
Range
35 58
40 70
2800 5200
7.8 9.8
Oil, %
2
Total Organic Acids
Chloride
Sulfate
Magnesium
Calcium
0.5 5
410 2600
31 - 480
130 - 1750
2.1 - 8
2.1 - 26
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&25526,21352'8&76
Aluminum
Copper
Iron
Lead
Zinc
81'(3/(7('$'',7,9(6
Sodium Nitrite
Sodium Nitrate
Sodium Phosphate
Sodium Tetraborate
Sodium Molybdate
Sodium Silicate
1
2
3 12
2.5 - 13
11 - 80
<2 - 17
2.5 - 22
85 - 1200
113 - 1350
780 - 2108
210 - 1687
44 - 404
24 - 200
RECYCLING ANTIFREEZE
Antifreeze recycling involves two separate processes 1) the combination of electrophysicochemical separations to consistently produce a glycol or glycol/water base stock of
sufficient purity to reformulate to antifreeze and 2) corrosion control chemical reformulation to
ensure its performance properties are indistinguishable from its virgin counterparts. Ingredients
that ensure on or off-site success are good quality control and assurance, a well engineered and
responsibly operated process, and OEM approved and proven reinhibition (glycol additive
package) technology.
A number of separation techniques are used to recycle used engine coolant from the vehicular
service industry. To achieve desirable results, a commercially successful recycling operation will
use multi-stage processes as shown in Figure 2. Candidate treatment technologies, their function
and side-streams generated are shown in Table 2. Removing a large portion of total dissolved
solids (TDS) in a recycling process is key. Desalting technologies are essential unit operations
required to produce an on-specification concentrate or pre-diluted recycled product and may
include any one or combination of the following:
Vacuum Distillation
Membrane Separation
Ion Exchange
PRETREATMENTS
Pretreatment of used engine coolant plays a vital role in the performance of downstream
desalting systems. Gravity separation, chemical treatment and particle filtration are usually
installed in front of desalting processes. Because of the high potential for organic fouling,
effective pretreatment is more critical with membrane based systems and ion exchange than with
distillation. Good pretreatment will improve recovery (flux rates) and, extend membrane life and
cleaning intervals.
While particle filtration is the least expensive treatment for antifreeze, it is also the least effective
method of producing on-specification engine coolant. This application involves pH adjustment,
particle filtration, and addition of corrosion inhibitors. Antifreeze treated by this method is typically
put back into the same car the fluid originally came from to avoid cross contamination between
vehicles. After a period of time, a volume of antifreeze recycled in this manner builds up too many
dissolved solids becoming very corrosive and will require change-out.
Most recycling techniques will use carbon adsorption as pretreatment or as a polish step to
remove dissolved organics and color. Adsorption efficiency increases as contact time increases.
2
Carbon adsorbers are typically operated at minimum flow rates of 3-5 gal/min-ft. (for a 30 inch
minimum bed depth). There are several choices among activated carbons. However, the most
common selection is made from subbituminous, bituminous or lignite based coals.
Figure 2
Table 2
Candidate Treatment Technologies
Technology
Primary Function
Side-Streams
GRAVITY SEPARATION
Open Tank
Plate or Tube
Centrifuge
CHEMICAL TREATMENT
Precipitation
Demulsification
Coagulation/Flocculation
Precipitants
Oil
Sludge
PARTICLE FILTRATION
Cartridge/Bag
Depth/Media
Particle Separation,
Filtration, Absorption
Filters
Media
MEMBRANE
Ultrafiltration
Nanofiltration
Reverse Osmosis
Reject, Cleaner
Wastewater &
Membranes
ELECTRO-MEMBRANE
Electrodialysis
Continuous Deionization
Brine, Membranes
Water Evaporation,
Salt-Out
Wastewater,
Still Bottoms
Carbon
Resins
DISTILLATION
POLISHING
Carbon adsorption
Ion Exchange
VACUUM DISTILLATION
Vacuum distillation is an established method used at large fixed sites and if soundly designed and
responsibly operated, can produce a concentrate glycol compliant with ASTM specifications.
Small scale vacuum distillation processes are commercially available but are normally slow (1-3
gallons per hour) with low recoveries. Large fixed distilleries are built to different specifications
3
and with dissimilar equipment than small scale units . Fully equipped quality assurance
laboratories are typically on-site at large distilleries to predict both product quality and plant
operational problems. Vacuum distillation has the additional advantage of removing water,
allowing for the production of concentrate antifreeze. Cost per installed capacity is highest for
vacuum distillation compared to other primary treatments.
Figure 3
ELECTRO-MEMBRANE
What makes electro-membrane processes, which include electrodialysis (ED), electrodeionization
(EDI) or continuous deionization (CDI), unique and different from evaporative techniques and
other membrane based processes is that they move dissolved minerals away from the glycolwater stream rather than the reverse, as illustrated in Figure 4. Because the quantity of minerals
in the feed stream is far less than that of the fluid, this feature offers many practical advantages.
In these processes, ions (ionized and ionizable species) are transported through a membrane
from one compartment to another under the influence of an electrical potential. EDI is a relatively
new process, which combines electrodialysis and ion-exchange by placing resin beads in the
diluting compartments of an ED stack, continuously producing a desalted stream without
chemical regeneration required by conventional ion exchange. EDI is usually used after RO or
ED for polishing.
TM
Figure 4
Table 3
Typical Glycol Desalting Performance
Using High Efficiency Electrodialysis (HEED)
PARAMETER
Total Acids, ppm
Chloride, ppm
Sodium Nitrite, ppm
Sodium Nitrate, ppm
Sodium Phosphate, ppm
Sulfate, ppm
Sodium Molybdate, ppm
Sodium Tetraborate, ppm
Sodium Silicate, ppm
Aluminum, ppm
Copper, ppm
Iron, ppm
Lead, ppm
Zinc, ppm
Magnesium, ppm
Calcium, ppm
pH
Used
Engine
Coolant
1092
68
2271
1319
1242
228
527
1587
200
3
4
20
18
13
8
26
8.6
Conductivity
2000
(PS/cm)
566
28
851
544
115
107
244
807
68
ND
ND
ND
1
2
1
7
8.1
Conductivity
1000
(PS/cm)
200
9
244
165
54
40
98
650
65
ND
ND
ND
ND
ND
ND
2
7.9
Conductivity
500
(PS/cm)
95
4
83
61
27
17
37
511
60
ND
ND
ND
ND
ND
ND
ND
7.7
Conductivity
30
(PS/cm)
ND
ND
ND
ND
ND
ND
ND
21
8
ND
ND
ND
ND
ND
ND
ND
6.4
ND Not Detected
SUMMARY
A number of methods are capable of producing recycled products to compare favorably with
new (virgin) antifreeze/coolant formulated with the same inhibitor technology. What constituent
limits and performance tests are acceptable for recycled antifreeze has caused considerable
confusion with end users, recyclers and government agencies. ASTM, OEM, and various states
have developed guidelines and regulations that govern the quality of recycled antifreeze. What is
acceptable to one entity is likely in conflict with another. The best recycling approach is to
conform to virgin requirements. Conformance to virgin glycol requirements reduces the inferiorproduct stigma associated with the reuse of antifreeze.
REFERRENCES
1. Coburn, C.B., Hudgens, R.D. and Mullen, M.D. Environmental Effects of Engine
Coolant Additives SAE Technical Papers, Engine Coolants and Cooling Systems, SP1456, p. 87, International Congress and Exposition, Detroit Michigan, March 1-4, 1999.
2. Hudgens, R. D. and Bustamante, R.B., Toxicity and Disposal of Engine Coolants,
Engine Coolant Testing: Third Volume, ASTM STP 1192, r. e. Beal, Ed., American
Society for Testing and Materials, Philadelphia, 1993, p. 149.
3. Frye, D.K., Chan, K., and Pourhassanian, C., Overview of Used Antifreeze and
Industrial Glycol Recycling by Vacuum Distillation, Engine Coolant Testing: Fourth
Volume, ASTM STP 1335, R.E. Beal, Ed., American Society for Testing and Materials,
1999, p. 236.
4. Haddock, M. E. and Eaton, E. R., Recycling Used Engine Coolant Using HighVolume Stationary Equipment, Engine Cooling Testing, Fourth Volume, ASTM STP
1335, R.E. Beal, Ed., American Society for Testing and Materials, 1999, pp. 251-260.
5. Kugn, W. and Eaton, E.R., Development of Mobile, On-Site Engine Coolant
Recycling Utilizing Reverse-Osmosis Technology, Engine Coolant Testing, Fourth
Volume, ASTM STP 1335, R.E. Beal, Ed., American Society for Testing and Materials,
1999, pp. 261-269.
6. Richardson, R. C., A Multi-Stage Process for Used Antifreeze/Coolant Purification,
Engine Coolant Testing: Third Volume, ASTM STP 1192, R.E. Beal, Ed., American
Society for Testing and Materials, Philadelphia, 1993, pp. 258-275.