Simulation of dry matter loss in biomass storage
Material degradation and a decrease of fuel quality are common phenomena when storing biomass. A magnitude of 7.8% has been reported to degrade over five months when storing spruce wood chips in the winter in Central Europe. This thesis presents a theoretical study of biomass storage. It includes in...
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KTH, Skolan för kemi, bioteknologi och hälsa (CBH)
2019
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ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-kth-2612002019-10-04T04:58:16ZSimulation of dry matter loss in biomass storageengSimulering av förluster av torrt material vid lagring av biomassaBjervås, JensKTH, Skolan för kemi, bioteknologi och hälsa (CBH)2019Forrest industryAerobic repsirationThermal runawayWood chipsChemical Process EngineeringKemiska processerEnergy SystemsEnergisystemBioprocess TechnologyBioprocessteknikMaterial degradation and a decrease of fuel quality are common phenomena when storing biomass. A magnitude of 7.8% has been reported to degrade over five months when storing spruce wood chips in the winter in Central Europe. This thesis presents a theoretical study of biomass storage. It includes investigations of bio-chemical, chemical and physical processes that occur during storage of chipped woody biomass. These processes lead to degradation caused by micro-activity, chemical oxidation reactions and physical transformation of water. Micro-activity was modeled with Monod kinetics which are Michaelis-Menten type of expressions. The rate expressions were complemented with dependency functions describing the impact of oxygen, moisture and temperature. The woody biomass was divided into three fractions. These fractions represent how hard different components of the wood are to degrade by microorganisms. Chemical oxidation was modeled as a first order rate expression with respect to the active components of the wood. Two different cases have been simulated during the project. Firstly, an isolated system with an initial oxygen concentration of air was considered. This case displayed a temperature increase of approximately 2˚C and a material degradation less than 1%. The second case considered an isolated system with an endless depot of oxygen. This case resulted in degradation losses around 0.45-0.95% in the temperature range between 65-80˚C during approximately 300 days of storage. The temperature increased slowly due to chemical oxidation. Student thesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-261200application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess |
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English |
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Forrest industry Aerobic repsiration Thermal runaway Wood chips Chemical Process Engineering Kemiska processer Energy Systems Energisystem Bioprocess Technology Bioprocessteknik |
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Forrest industry Aerobic repsiration Thermal runaway Wood chips Chemical Process Engineering Kemiska processer Energy Systems Energisystem Bioprocess Technology Bioprocessteknik Bjervås, Jens Simulation of dry matter loss in biomass storage |
description |
Material degradation and a decrease of fuel quality are common phenomena when storing biomass. A magnitude of 7.8% has been reported to degrade over five months when storing spruce wood chips in the winter in Central Europe. This thesis presents a theoretical study of biomass storage. It includes investigations of bio-chemical, chemical and physical processes that occur during storage of chipped woody biomass. These processes lead to degradation caused by micro-activity, chemical oxidation reactions and physical transformation of water. Micro-activity was modeled with Monod kinetics which are Michaelis-Menten type of expressions. The rate expressions were complemented with dependency functions describing the impact of oxygen, moisture and temperature. The woody biomass was divided into three fractions. These fractions represent how hard different components of the wood are to degrade by microorganisms. Chemical oxidation was modeled as a first order rate expression with respect to the active components of the wood. Two different cases have been simulated during the project. Firstly, an isolated system with an initial oxygen concentration of air was considered. This case displayed a temperature increase of approximately 2˚C and a material degradation less than 1%. The second case considered an isolated system with an endless depot of oxygen. This case resulted in degradation losses around 0.45-0.95% in the temperature range between 65-80˚C during approximately 300 days of storage. The temperature increased slowly due to chemical oxidation. |
author |
Bjervås, Jens |
author_facet |
Bjervås, Jens |
author_sort |
Bjervås, Jens |
title |
Simulation of dry matter loss in biomass storage |
title_short |
Simulation of dry matter loss in biomass storage |
title_full |
Simulation of dry matter loss in biomass storage |
title_fullStr |
Simulation of dry matter loss in biomass storage |
title_full_unstemmed |
Simulation of dry matter loss in biomass storage |
title_sort |
simulation of dry matter loss in biomass storage |
publisher |
KTH, Skolan för kemi, bioteknologi och hälsa (CBH) |
publishDate |
2019 |
url |
http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-261200 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT bjervasjens simulationofdrymatterlossinbiomassstorage AT bjervasjens simuleringavforlusteravtorrtmaterialvidlagringavbiomassa |
_version_ |
1719260049101029376 |