nexcel
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The finished product

Nexcel greases the wheels of change

Riley Riley

NexcelIt’s the automotive equivalent of turning water into wine.

Scientists have succeeded in transforming a collection of household garbage into “automotive grade” engine oil for use in cars.

Castrol innovation business Nexcel used chewing gum, used kitchen oil, batteries, bathroom sealant and even a Christmas tree to create the oil.

“The project showcases the sustainability potential of waste,” Nexcel’s sustainability director, John Ward-Zinski, said.

“This was a hugely demanding project completed over the last year and one which we hope will open the public’s eyes as to the importance of recycling and sustainability.

“Few people would think that discarded Christmas trees and old chewing gum could have a commercial or environmental value, but our engine oil shows this is anything but the case.”

Nexcel’s ambitious project has been inspired by the company’s innovative sealed oil cell, which provides vehicle manufacturers with efficiency benefits and promotes used oil collection and re-refinement.

“Our system has already been utilised by our technical partner Aston Martin, for use in the visceral Vantage AMR Pro at last year’s Goodwood Festival of Speed, where the car became the first to tackle the legendary hill climb using re-refined oils,” Ward-Zinski said.

“In 2016, Nexcel and Aston Martin also achieved a podium finish in the competitive VLN Championship at the most arduous racetrack in the world: the Nürburgring.

“Sustainability, and therefore re-refinement, are of growing global significance; hopefully this project helps demonstrate the extent of what is possible.”

The most significant challenges of the project included the yielding of phenols and catechols from the waste to be used as antioxidants, forming the basis of the chemical additives required.

Nexcel’s experts worked with a zero-waste goal, and after significant research, analysis of component properties and trial and error.

The final cocktail blend consisted of 180 chewing gum pieces, 500ml of used kitchen oil, 1g of RTV silicone sealant, 14 household batteries, 1 litre of used engine oil and an old Christmas tree.

Extraction of components from these waste items enabled Nexcel scientists to produce 1 litre of automotive quality engine oil.

“Re-refinement of used oil can create a high-quality product when blended with new additives, but bulk feedstocks made up of many different types of used oils can complicate the process and reduce the process yield,” Ward-Zinski said.

“Nexcel’s oil management system avoids this by segregating used engine oil, keeping it in the cell during collection.

“For this particular project we wanted to make the entire oil from waste materials, and the challenge lay in the creation of the chemical additives.

“However, with creative utilization of modern technology there is huge potential in recycling. It could even help prevent the traditional Christmas tree tip-run needle-drop, from which no car interior has ever recovered.”

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