4.7 Article

Chemical forms of ash-forming elements in woody biomass fuels

Journal

FUEL
Volume 89, Issue 2, Pages 481-493

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuel.2009.09.005

Keywords

Biomass; Ash; Fuel characterization

Funding

  1. Finnish Graduate School of Chemical Engineering
  2. TEKES project ChemCom and its industrial partners

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Advanced fuel characterization helps to predict ash fouling and slagging. Chemical fractionation analysis, i.e. sequential leaching in H(2)O, NH(4)Ac(aq), and HCl(aq), was applied to the biomass of spruce, pine, birch, and aspen. All of the Cl in the samples and most of the K, Na, and P were water-soluble; most of the Mg and Mn, and some of the Ca were leached in NH(4)Ac; most of the Ca was leached in HCl; and most of the Si and S remained insoluble in the biomass. Ion Chromatography found the water-soluble Cl, P, and S present as Cl, PO(4)(3-), and SO(4)(2-), respectively, and equimolar concentrations of C(2)O(4)(2-) as leached Ca in the acid fraction. The biomass solids were determined for anionic groups by methylene blue sorption. The contents were lowest in the wood samples (22-118 mmol/kg(D.S.)) and highest in the bark samples (130-453 mmol/kg(D.S.)). The closing of the ion charge balance led to a quantitative model for the ash-forming matter: water-soluble salts (KCl, K(2)HPO(4), and K(2)SO(4)), acid-soluble minerals (CaC(2)O(4)), non-soluble minerals (SiO(2)), and organically associated ash-forming elements (ionically bonded Ca(2+), Mg(2+), Mn(2+), and K(+), and covalently bonded P and S). (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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