Impact of Pretreatment on Hydrothermally Carbonized Spruce
Upgrading biomass waste streams can improve economics in wood industries by adding value to the process. This work considers use of a hydrothermal carbonization (HTC) process for the residual feedstock after lignin and hemicelluloses extraction. Batch experiments were performed at 200–240 °C tempera...
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doaj-cb8b0222721f463abb489f29abb6b4ea2020-11-25T03:17:06ZengMDPI AGEnergies1996-10732020-06-01132984298410.3390/en13112984Impact of Pretreatment on Hydrothermally Carbonized SpruceAnna Partridge0Ekaterina Sermyagina1Esa Vakkilainen2Energy Technology, Laboratory of Sustainable Energy Systems, LUT University, PL 20, 53851 Lappeenranta, FinlandEnergy Technology, Laboratory of Sustainable Energy Systems, LUT University, PL 20, 53851 Lappeenranta, FinlandEnergy Technology, Laboratory of Sustainable Energy Systems, LUT University, PL 20, 53851 Lappeenranta, FinlandUpgrading biomass waste streams can improve economics in wood industries by adding value to the process. This work considers use of a hydrothermal carbonization (HTC) process for the residual feedstock after lignin and hemicelluloses extraction. Batch experiments were performed at 200–240 °C temperatures and three hours residence time with an 8:1 biomass to water ratio for two feedstocks: Raw spruce and spruce after lignin extraction. The proximate analysis and heating value showed similar results for both feedstocks, indicating that the thermochemical conversion is not impacted by the removal of lignin and hemicelluloses; the pretreatment processing slightly increases the heating value of the treated feedstock, but the HTC conversion process produces a consistent upgrading trend for both the treated and untreated feedstocks. The energy yield was 9.7 percentage points higher for the treated wood on average across the range temperatures due to the higher mass yield in the treated experiments. The energy densification ratio and the mass yield were strongly correlated with reaction temperature, while the energy yield was not. Lignocellulosic composition of the solid HTC product is mainly affected by HTC treatment, the effect of lignin extraction is negligible.https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/11/2984hydrothermal carbonizationligninbiomassenergy densification |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Anna Partridge Ekaterina Sermyagina Esa Vakkilainen |
spellingShingle |
Anna Partridge Ekaterina Sermyagina Esa Vakkilainen Impact of Pretreatment on Hydrothermally Carbonized Spruce Energies hydrothermal carbonization lignin biomass energy densification |
author_facet |
Anna Partridge Ekaterina Sermyagina Esa Vakkilainen |
author_sort |
Anna Partridge |
title |
Impact of Pretreatment on Hydrothermally Carbonized Spruce |
title_short |
Impact of Pretreatment on Hydrothermally Carbonized Spruce |
title_full |
Impact of Pretreatment on Hydrothermally Carbonized Spruce |
title_fullStr |
Impact of Pretreatment on Hydrothermally Carbonized Spruce |
title_full_unstemmed |
Impact of Pretreatment on Hydrothermally Carbonized Spruce |
title_sort |
impact of pretreatment on hydrothermally carbonized spruce |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Energies |
issn |
1996-1073 |
publishDate |
2020-06-01 |
description |
Upgrading biomass waste streams can improve economics in wood industries by adding value to the process. This work considers use of a hydrothermal carbonization (HTC) process for the residual feedstock after lignin and hemicelluloses extraction. Batch experiments were performed at 200–240 °C temperatures and three hours residence time with an 8:1 biomass to water ratio for two feedstocks: Raw spruce and spruce after lignin extraction. The proximate analysis and heating value showed similar results for both feedstocks, indicating that the thermochemical conversion is not impacted by the removal of lignin and hemicelluloses; the pretreatment processing slightly increases the heating value of the treated feedstock, but the HTC conversion process produces a consistent upgrading trend for both the treated and untreated feedstocks. The energy yield was 9.7 percentage points higher for the treated wood on average across the range temperatures due to the higher mass yield in the treated experiments. The energy densification ratio and the mass yield were strongly correlated with reaction temperature, while the energy yield was not. Lignocellulosic composition of the solid HTC product is mainly affected by HTC treatment, the effect of lignin extraction is negligible. |
topic |
hydrothermal carbonization lignin biomass energy densification |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/11/2984 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT annapartridge impactofpretreatmentonhydrothermallycarbonizedspruce AT ekaterinasermyagina impactofpretreatmentonhydrothermallycarbonizedspruce AT esavakkilainen impactofpretreatmentonhydrothermallycarbonizedspruce |
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