4.8 Article

Revealing roles of CO2 and N2 in pressurized hydrothermal carbonization process for enhancing energy recovery and carbon sequestration

Journal

BIORESOURCE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 385, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biortech.2023.129429

Keywords

Bio-renewable energy; Combustion performance; Energy and carbon balance; Biochar; hydrochar; CO2 utilization

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In this study, the catalytic effects of CO2 on hydrochar production and its quality were investigated through CO2- and N2-pressurized hydrothermal carbonization processes. Both processes enhanced the energy recovery in hydrochar by enhancing the dehydration reactions. However, they exhibited contrasting trends in volatile release, oxygen removal, and combustion performance as pressure increased. High N2 pressure enhanced deoxygenation reaction and increased hydrochar aromaticity and combustion activation energy. This study presents a feasible strategy to produce high-quality hydrochar for renewable energy and carbon recovery using CO2-rich flue gas in the HTC process.
In this study, CO2- and N2-pressurized hydrothermal carbonization processes were investigated to understand the catalytic effects of CO2 on hydrochar production and its quality (e.g., surface properties, energy recovery, and combustion behaviour). Both CO2- and N2-pressurized HTC processes could enhance the energy recovery (from 61.5% to 63.0-67.8%) in hydrochar by enhancing the dehydration reactions. Nonetheless, the two systems exhibited contrasting trends in volatile release, oxygen removal, and combustion performance as a function of increasing pressure. High N2 pressure enhanced deoxygenation reaction, facilitating the release of volatiles and increasing the hydrochar aromaticity and combustion activation energy (172.7 kJ/mol for HC/5N). Without the contribution of CO2, excessively high pressure may cause an adverse impact on the fuel performance owing to higher oxidation resistance. This study presents an important and feasible strategy to utilise CO2-rich flue gas in the HTC process to produce high-quality hydrochar for renewable energy and carbon recovery.

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