This is not a whitespider argument starter, honest!
I read something the other day, and have since tried to research a real answer one way or another to no avail. I also started this same thread elsewhere and just got argument and name calling from people claiming to be expert. I'll try again.
I would never burn plastics. its very polluting. At their worst they produce chlorine containing dioxins which are highly poisonous, very long lasting and build up in things like us. don't bun pvc, just don't.
however some plastics are basically just carbon and hydrogen, in long chains of various shapes, cross linked here and there and maybe with bit of oxygen tagged in. For example Poly ethylene, is just ethylene/ethene with few cross links to make veeeeery long chains/networks. poly propylene is similarly long chains. its kind of ...solid oil....or wax. Burn it and you don't get dioxins, there is no chlorine. like burning any liquid or wax, you'll get some sooty particles if its not burnt hot and cleanly, these aren't nice but if we are careful to burn hot and clean as much as possible we don't cause trouble...just the same as burning wood creates sooty particulates (smoke/creosote) of we don't do it well. So, here's the question. ...
If you burn PP or PE, how bad is it really? the reason I'm asking is, PP and PE are common and easy identifiable as clear or cloudy white plastic bottles and common in household waste, and I'm thinking would few strips work as a good firelighter? Or would they soot my flue or pollute the neighbourhood?
Now if course there are the modifiers and the dyes....but the clear/cloudy white bottles are dye free. Modifiers? not sure what they are though.
So, does anybody have a link to a solid bit of research on what is produced (and how nasty it is or isn't) when you burn PP or PE? and would a few strips cut from a bottle work as a decent firelighter without sooting my flue?
discuss (or degenerate into argument...but I'd prefer not!)
I read something the other day, and have since tried to research a real answer one way or another to no avail. I also started this same thread elsewhere and just got argument and name calling from people claiming to be expert. I'll try again.
I would never burn plastics. its very polluting. At their worst they produce chlorine containing dioxins which are highly poisonous, very long lasting and build up in things like us. don't bun pvc, just don't.
however some plastics are basically just carbon and hydrogen, in long chains of various shapes, cross linked here and there and maybe with bit of oxygen tagged in. For example Poly ethylene, is just ethylene/ethene with few cross links to make veeeeery long chains/networks. poly propylene is similarly long chains. its kind of ...solid oil....or wax. Burn it and you don't get dioxins, there is no chlorine. like burning any liquid or wax, you'll get some sooty particles if its not burnt hot and cleanly, these aren't nice but if we are careful to burn hot and clean as much as possible we don't cause trouble...just the same as burning wood creates sooty particulates (smoke/creosote) of we don't do it well. So, here's the question. ...
If you burn PP or PE, how bad is it really? the reason I'm asking is, PP and PE are common and easy identifiable as clear or cloudy white plastic bottles and common in household waste, and I'm thinking would few strips work as a good firelighter? Or would they soot my flue or pollute the neighbourhood?
Now if course there are the modifiers and the dyes....but the clear/cloudy white bottles are dye free. Modifiers? not sure what they are though.
So, does anybody have a link to a solid bit of research on what is produced (and how nasty it is or isn't) when you burn PP or PE? and would a few strips cut from a bottle work as a decent firelighter without sooting my flue?
discuss (or degenerate into argument...but I'd prefer not!)