4.7 Article

Hammer milling switchgrass from weathered bales

Journal

INDUSTRIAL CROPS AND PRODUCTS
Volume 197, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.indcrop.2023.116647

Keywords

Grinding; Hammer mill; Particle size analysis; Switchgrass; Weathered biomass

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Considering the need for efficient grinding of grasses for bioenergy, particularly in mass flow manner, a study was conducted to investigate the grinding of weathered and unweathered switchgrass using a hammermill. The results showed similar grinding rates for both conditions with increasing screen opening size, but with slightly higher throughput for unweathered switchgrass. The particle size distribution parameters were not affected by the switchgrass condition, but there was a difference in the geometric mean length between the two conditions. Further research is needed.
Considering that grasses have been targeted as raw material for bioenergy and will have to be handled in mass flow manner to be efficient, there is need to understand how grasses can be ground into easily flowing particles. For a biorefinery, the biomass will inevitably have to be stored, more than likely in an environment exposed to the elements. Consequently, there is a need to understand how the weathered material will interact with pro-cessing equipment like a hammermill. Grinding tests with switchgrass stored for a year in the open (weathered) and undercover (unweathered) were undertaken. The switchgrass was ground in an 18.64 kW hammermill with screen openings 9.52, 31.75, and infinity mm (no screen). Results from this preliminary evaluation show that both weathered switchgrass (WSG) and unweathered switchgrass (USG) had grinding rates similarly increasing as the screen openings size increased with the unweathered material having a slightly higher throughput. When analyzed as a volume distribution of ground particles in machine vision methodology, switchgrass condition did not affect the particle size distribution parameters of the ground material. However, the geometric mean length for WSG increased from 6 mm to 37 mm with increasing screen size for WSG, whereas the geometric mean length for USG increased but only from 6 mm to 31 mm. While future studies are needed, the results however serve as a reference for preprocess grinding of biomass, either fresh or weathered (common in large-scale storage), for bioenergy/industrial use in obtaining the desired particle size at a given production rate.

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