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Insights into hydrothermal treatment of biomass blends: Assessing energy yield and ash content for biofuel enhancement

Fidel Vallejo, Diana Yánez-Sevilla, Luis A. Díaz‐Robles, Francisco Cubillos, Andrea Teresa Espinoza Pérez, Lorena Espinoza, Ernesto Pino‐Cortés, Francisco Cereceda‐Balic

2024PLoS ONE12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This study explores the Hydrothermal Carbonization (HTC) treatment of lignocellulosic biomass blends, delving into the influence of several key parameters: temperature, additive nature and dosage, residence time, and biomass composition. Rapeseeds, Pinus radiata sawdust, oat husks, and pressed olive served as the studied biomasses. One hundred twenty-eight experiments were conducted to assess the effects on mass yield (MY), energy yield (EY), higher heating value (HHV), and final ash content (ASH) by a Factorial Experimental Design. The derived model equations demonstrated a robust fit to the experimental data, averaging an R2 exceeding 0.94, affirming their predictive accuracy. The observed energy yield ranged between 65% and 80%, notably with sawdust and olive blends securing EY levels surpassing 70%, while rapeseed blends exhibited the highest HHV at 25 MJ/kg. Temperature emerged as the most influential factor, resulting in an 11% decrease in MY and a substantial 2.20 MJ/kg increase in HHV. Contrastingly, blend composition and additive presence significantly impacted ASH and EY, with all blends exhibiting increased ASH in the presence of additives. Higher initial hemicellulose and aqueous extractive content in raw biomass correlated proportionally with heightened HHV.

Topics & Concepts

SawdustHydrothermal carbonizationBiomass (ecology)BiofuelHemicelluloseHeat of combustionLigninPulp and paper industryBioenergyFactorial experimentMaterials scienceHuskRaw materialArundo donaxChemistryBotanyComposite materialAgronomyBiotechnologyCarbonizationMathematicsOrganic chemistryBiologyCombustionEngineeringStatisticsScanning electron microscopeThermochemical Biomass Conversion ProcessesCatalysis and Hydrodesulfurization StudiesLignin and Wood Chemistry
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