4.6 Article

Mercury in Biomass Feedstock and Combustion Residuals

Journal

WATER AIR AND SOIL POLLUTION
Volume 209, Issue 1-4, Pages 429-437

Publisher

SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
DOI: 10.1007/s11270-009-0211-9

Keywords

Mercury; Biomass; Fuel feedstock; Combustion; Leaching; Ash; Slag; Fly ash

Funding

  1. UC Davis-Chevron Joint Research Agreement

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An exploratory survey of the mercury content of some common California biomass feedstocks shows that the concentrations are well below EPA toxicity levels with representative feedstock concentrations of 20 ppb for rice straw, 28 ppb for wheat straw, and 32 ppb for whole-tree wood chips. The temporal variability for rice straw (17-20 ppb) is near the analytical uncertainty (similar to 2 ppb). Saline-irrigated feedstock does not contain greatly higher mercury contents (17-38 ppb) compared to normally irrigated feedstock. Water leaching has likewise no detectable effects on mercury mobility, despite an up to 30% increase in the Hg concentrations attributable to mass losses during leaching. Combustion at temperatures of at least 575A degrees C results in complete volatilization of mercury leaving solid ash and slag residuals with mercury contents at or near the lower limit of detection (5 ppb). The mercury strongly concentrated in fly ash can reach concentrations up to 40 times (< 1,166 ppb) the corresponding fuel concentrations.

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