RESUMO
Walnut oil production waste (WOPW) is a by-product of walnut oil processing. The organic waste is rich in holocellulose and lignin, showing good potential to be converted by thermal process to valuable products. Superheated steam (SHS) torrefaction is a recently proposed thermal process enabling fast and unformal biomass heating, resulting in high-quality solid products as direct fuel. The potential of SHS to torrefy lipids and proteins (being rich in WOPW) is attractive for broader application of SHS torrefaction to upgrade more biomass wastes. SHS torrefaction was studied in this work to upgrade WOPW for solid products with different reaction temperatures (200, 250, 300 °C) and residence times (20, 40, 60 min). The lowest weight yield was 43.64 wt% under the severest treatment of 300 °C and 60 min, accompanied with the highest energy enhancement of 1.34 (reaching HHV of 27.03 MJ/kg). Response surface method is employed to reveal the effects of temperature and residence time. Residence time of 40 min under 300 °C was supposed to be an ideal condition to upgrade WOPW with HHV of 26.68 MJ/kg and in the range of coal from Van Krevelen diagram. Combustion indices (e.g., fuel ratio, combustion index, and volatile ignitability) indicated that the aforementioned torrefied WOPW had favourable properties as co-firing material. On the other hand, combustion behaviours analysis demonstrated that SHS torrefied WOPW could perform well as direct fuel. Aqueous effluent was also condensed and analyzed, where products from lipids and proteins were massively presented, giving an insight into the decomposition of those two constitutes undergoing SHS torrefaction.
Assuntos
Juglans , Vapor , Biomassa , Lipídeos , TemperaturaRESUMO
Superheated steam (SHS) was capable of fast and uniformly torrefying heavily loaded biomass. This work detailedly investigated the torrefied biomass in terms of fuel property and combustion behavior. The reactor chamber (300 ml) was fully loaded with pinewood pellets (160 g). Overall residence times were 20, 40 and 60 min (including preheating and holding periods) under 225, 275 and 325 °C. Biomass was estimated by elements, TG, FTIR, HHV, fuel property, combustion and pyrolysis behaviors, combustion kinetics and moisture reabsorption. Holding period as short as 2 min at 325 °C with a heating rate of 15 °Câ§min-1 was found to enhance energy density by 45% and generated homogeneous coal-like products with HHV of 26.76 MJâ§kg-1. Fixed carbon content increased to 64.84 wt%. The combustion activation energy increased to 79.66 kJâ§mol-1. Combustion indices and behaviors indicated that torrefied biomass had benign characteristics either for co-firing or as fuel. All suggests good potential of SHS torrefaction to obtain fuel alternatives.