Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
764987 Energy Conversion and Management 2016 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Aqueous phase reforming: a promising strategy for cheese whey valorisation.•In-depth understanding of the effect of the operating conditions on the process.•Process optimisation for the selective production of valuable gas and liquid products.•High P, T, lactose concentration and spatial time favour gas production.•High T, low spatial time and the use of diluted solutions maximise liquids production.

Cheese effluent management has become an important issue owing to its high biochemical oxygen demand and chemical oxygen demand values. Given this scenario, this work addresses the valorisation of lactose (the largest organic constituent of this waste) by aqueous phase reforming, analysing the influence of the most important operating variables (temperature, pressure, lactose concentration and mass of catalyst/lactose mass flow rate ratio) as well as optimising the process for the production of either gaseous or liquid value-added chemicals. The carbon converted into gas, liquid and solid products varied as follows: 5–41%, 33–97% and 0–59%, respectively. The gas phase was made up of a mixture of H2 (8–58 vol.%), CO2 (33–85 vol.%), CO (0–15 vol.%) and CH4 (0–14 vol.%). The liquid phase consisted of a mixture of aldehydes: 0–11%, carboxylic acids: 0–22%, monohydric alcohols: 0–23%, polyhydric-alcohols: 0–48%, C3-ketones: 4–100%, C4-ketones: 0–18%, cyclic-ketones: 0–15% and furans: 0–85%. H2 production is favoured at high pressure, elevated temperature, employing a high amount of catalyst and a concentrated lactose solution. Liquid production is preferential using diluted lactose solutions. At high pressure, the production of C3-ketones is preferential using a high temperature and a low amount of catalyst, while a medium temperature and a high amount of catalyst favours the production of furans. The production of alcohols is preferential using medium temperature and pressure and a low amount of catalyst.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Energy (General)
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