4.7 Article

Co-pyrolysis of light bio-oil leached bamboo and heavy bio-oil: Effects of mass ratio, pyrolysis temperature, and residence time on the biochar

Journal

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL
Volume 437, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.cej.2022.135253

Keywords

Biomass; Biochar; Bio-oil; Pyrolysis; Leaching pretreatment; Response surface methodology

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52076112]
  2. Youth Top Talent Project of National Forestry and Grassland Administration of China [2020132612]
  3. Six Talent Peaks Project of Jiangsu Province of China [XNY-027]
  4. 333 Project of Jiangsu Province of China, Qinglan Project of Jiangsu Province of China
  5. Outstanding Youth Foundation of Nanjing Forestry University
  6. [JC2019001]

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A new method for preparing biochar through co-pyrolysis of heavy fraction of bio-oil (HB) and leached bamboo (LB-bamboo) was proposed in this study. The co-processing of HB and bamboo synergistically improved the yield and higher heating value (HHV) of biochar. The removal of ash and metallic species in bamboo by LB leaching pretreatment led to a more synergistic effect observed during the subsequent co-pyrolysis.
Light fraction of bio-oil (LB) has high contents of water and organic acids with good liquidity and is a promising leaching agent for deashing of biomass. Heavy fraction of bio-oil (HB) contains more amounts of phenols and pyrolytic lignin, has poor fluidity, and is easy to carbonize when heated. In this study, a novel method for preparation of biochar from co-pyrolysis of HB and LB leached bamboo (LB-bamboo) has been proposed. Effects of three experimental variables, namely, mass ratio (1:0-0:1), pyrolysis temperature (400-700 ?), and residence time (5-30 min), on the mass yield and properties of biochar were investigated, based on response surface methodology. Results showed that co-processing of HB and bamboo by pyrolysis synergistically improved the yield and higher heating value (HHV) of biochar. Under typical co-pyrolysis conditions (mass ratio 1:1, 550 ?, and 17.5 min), the experimentally determined yield (25.97%) and HHV (29.43 MJ/kg) of biochar from co-pyrolysis of HB and raw bamboo were 1.61% and 1.01 MJ/kg higher than the corresponding theoretically predicted values. The ash and metallic species in bamboo were significantly removed by LB leaching pretreatment, leading to a more synergistic effect observed during the subsequent co-pyrolysis. The experimentally determined yield (24.63%) and HHV (30.62 MJ/kg) of biochar from co-pyrolysis of HB and LB-bamboo were 2.40% and 1.57 MJ/kg higher than the corresponding theoretical values. Ultimately, the regression equations between the biochar properties and the three experimental variables were established. The best fitting models for yield and HHV of biochar were quadratic regression equations.

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