화학공학소재연구정보센터
Fuel Processing Technology, Vol.142, 157-166, 2016
Fast devolatilization characteristics of'low cost' biomass fuels, wood and reed. Potential feedstock for gasification
Fast devolatilization of woody (mixture of softwoods) and herbaceous (reed) biomasses has been studied in a heated foil reactor coupled to an FTIR spectrophotometer. Biomass fuels were chosen based on their potential for contributing to power generation on an industrial scale through gasification in The Netherlands. Heating rate (600 degrees C/s) and holding time (10 s) at peak pyrolysis temperature were chosen to correspond to conditions encountered in industrial processes. The effect of peak pyrolysis temperature on pyrolysis products was investigated. Particular emphasis was given to tar collection, and subsequent gravimetric quantification. The results indicated a strong total weight loss increase with temperature, to reach an asymptote char yield of 16.7 wt% at 800 degrees C and of 32.4 wt% at 700 degrees C for wood and reed, respectively. Reed primary devolatilization reactions ceased at lower temperatures compared to wood. The latter was confirmed by the lower activation energy of reed (32.1 kJ/mol) compared with that of wood (38.4 kJ/mol) during extrapolation of kinetic data from the fast devolatilization experiments. CO2 dominated the gaseous products released at lower temperatures (<700 degrees C) while CO became predominant at higher pyrolysis temperatures (>700 degrees C) reaching a maximum of 19.1 wt.% and 18 wt.% for wood and reed, respectively, at 1000 degrees C. Maximum tar yields of 38.8 wt.% (d.b.) of dry wood and 23.3 wt.% (d.b.)of dry reed were able to be recovered at 600 degrees C. An overall mass balance of approximately 90 wt.% (db.) for both biomass fuels was obtained at high (900-1000 degrees C) pyrolysis peak temperatures. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.