4.7 Article

The effect of inherent inorganics and CO2 co-pyrolysis on biochar production from biowastes and their gasification reactivity

Journal

BIOMASS & BIOENERGY
Volume 158, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biombioe.2022.106361

Keywords

Biochar; Pyrolysis; Co-pyrolysis; Ash; CO2 gasification

Funding

  1. Cooper Union Enders fund

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This study investigates the influence of feedstock selection on the quantity and quality of biochars produced from the pyrolysis of food waste and biowaste. The results show that the ash content of the feedstock plays a significant role in char yields and reactivity for CO2 gasification. Additionally, the addition of CO2 during pyrolysis has different effects on different feedstocks, highlighting the feedstock-specific nature of pyrolysis conditions. Overall, ash content and feedstock selection are important factors in determining the reactivity of biochars for gasification.
In this work, we investigate how feedstock selection influences the quantity and quality of biochars produced from pyrolysis of food waste and biowaste. The influence of feedstock ash content on pyrolysis char yields and the resultant char's reactivity for CO2 gasification was measured. Higher ash content feedstocks had lower char yields while higher lignin content feedstocks had higher char yields after pyrolysis at 500 degrees C. The relationship between feedstock ash content and char yield was found to hold when isolating feedstocks with similar lignin content. Ash content was found to be important for gasification reactivity; biochars leached of inorganics with nitric acid had gasification reaction rates up to three times slower than their non-leached counterparts depending on the initial feedstock. The addition of CO2 during pyrolysis (up to 22.5% by volume), which has been shown to increase biochar surface area, was also investigated for six of the eight feedstocks. Certain feedstocks, like nutshells, had no change in pyrolysis char yields whereas other feedstocks like corncob and sunflower seed shells had higher char yields after pyrolysis with CO2. Overall, biochars formed during CO2 co-pyrolysis did not have significantly different reactivity for CO2 gasification, despite most of the biochars having higher moisture capacities, a proxy for surface area. The results show that ash content, and therefore feedstock selection, is important for biochar reactivity for gasification, and further, that investigating influences of pyrolysis conditions may also be feedstock specific.

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