Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4768315 | Fuel | 2017 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Lignocellulosic biomass is a chemically and morphologically heterogeneous material. This heterogeneity is in part responsible for the vast number of thermal decomposition products seen in pyrolysis events. While modeling of biomass pyrolysis has been a subject of much research in past years at length-scales ranging from macro to molecular, the majority of these works have focused on a range of continuum-based approaches. Though effective at capturing global outcomes, these approaches are less tractable as frameworks for capturing microstructural effects and upscaling molecular information. This work demonstrates the use of kinetic-cellular automata (k-CA) as an alternative platform for the modeling and simulation of biomass pyrolysis. Asides from being effective at capturing transport and chemical processes in highly heterogeneous system, k-CA is capable of modeling microstructural changes that occur as a result of chemical and physical transformations. A number of benchmark trials demonstrated the convergence of the k-CA to global continuum outcomes. Application of the k-CA to actual two-dimensional (2-D) biomass microstructures show promise for this platform as an intermediate length-scale tool capable of predicting char morphologies that mimic experimental outcomes at length-scales between those of atomistic events and those governed by macroscopically averaged approaches.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Chemical Engineering (General)
Authors
Michael O. Adenson, Clark Templeton, Joseph J. Biernacki,