Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7606866 | Journal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis | 2015 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Miscanthus conversion to bio-fuels was investigated using sub- and supercritical water at 410 and 460 °C with high mass ratios of water to biomass to ascertain the maximum yields that could be achieved. The results indicate that conversions increased with increasing miscanthus to water mass ratio at high water ratio and 410 °C to give the highest conversions of â¼90 wt.%, producing â¼21 wt.% heavy oil, â¼27 wt.% gas, â¼28 wt.% water and â¼12 wt.% light oil. At 460 °C, the maximum conversion was similar but the liquid product was lighter with only 7% heavy oil and more hydrocarbon gas being obtained. The oxygen contents of heavy oil recovered â¼12-16% (for 410 °C and 460 °C), with H/C ratio of 1.09 at 410 °C. Under equivalent conditions with tetralin as a model hydrogen-donor solvent, similar overall conversions were achieved but with much lower solvent to miscanthus mass ratios were needed and the liquid products have lower oxygen contents (â¼13%). Reduced CO and increased CO2 yields provide evidence that water hydrogen is being utilised but the estimated amounts of ca. 0.5% at 410 and 460 °C are considerably lower than with hydrogen-donor solvents which account for the lower yields of bio-oils and their higher oxygen contents.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Khairuddin Md. Isa, Colin E. Snape, Clement Uguna, Will Meredith,