Litcius/Paper detail

Residual pyrolysis biochar as additive to enhance wood pellets quality

R. García, M.V. Gil, A. Fanjul, Andrés Felipe Rojas González, Juan Majada, F. Rubiera, C. Pevida

2021Renewable Energy24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Woody biomass pellets' demand for primary energy production is increasing. To guarantee sustainable and cost-efficient pellet production the diversification of biomass feedstock is mandatory. In this work it is proposed to re-use the solid biochar obtained from pyrolysis of eucalyptus (PEc) at 700 °C as an additive to produce enhanced pine sawdust (PIN) pellets. The process required the addition of glycerol as a lubricant in a percentage of 1 and 2 wt% per 5 and 10 wt% of pyrolyzed eucalyptus in the blend, respectively. Small additions of PEc enhanced PIN pellets’ grindability and water-resistance, providing products with remarkable values of durability (up to 99%), net calorific value (up to 20 MJ/kg), energy density (up to 13.3 GJ/m3), and particle density (up to 1.24 g/cm3). N, S, chlorine, and heavy metals contents were also analyzed. The proposed pellets fulfill the A1/A2 and the I1/I2 quality classes for domestic and industrial wood pellets, respectively. A preliminary economic evaluation indicated that pellets made up from a mixture of 90% PIN and 10% PEc are competitive compared to raw PIN pellets, with expected savings in the costs of production, energy, transport, and construction of a storage site of 4, 13, 10 and 7%, respectively.

Topics & Concepts

PelletsBiocharPyrolysisRaw materialPulp and paper industryPelletHeat of combustionBiomass (ecology)SawdustBioenergyWaste managementMaterials scienceEnvironmental scienceWood processingBiofuelComposite materialChemistryAgronomyCombustionForestryEngineeringOrganic chemistryGeographyBiologyThermochemical Biomass Conversion ProcessesForest Biomass Utilization and ManagementLignin and Wood Chemistry