Prediction of the Behavior of Sunflower Husk Ash after Its Processing by Various Torrefaction Methods
Rafail Isemin (),
Fouzi Tabet,
Artemy Nebyvaev,
Vadim Kokh-Tatarenko,
Sergey Kuzmin,
Oleg Milovanov,
Dmitry Klimov,
Alexander Mikhalev,
Semen Dobkin and
Yuri Zhulaev
Additional contact information
Rafail Isemin: Biocenter, Tambov State Technical University, 392000 Tambov, Russia
Fouzi Tabet: Opti’Tech, 04107 Leipzig, Germany
Artemy Nebyvaev: Biocenter, Tambov State Technical University, 392000 Tambov, Russia
Vadim Kokh-Tatarenko: Biocenter, Tambov State Technical University, 392000 Tambov, Russia
Sergey Kuzmin: Biocenter, Tambov State Technical University, 392000 Tambov, Russia
Oleg Milovanov: Biocenter, Tambov State Technical University, 392000 Tambov, Russia
Dmitry Klimov: Biocenter, Tambov State Technical University, 392000 Tambov, Russia
Alexander Mikhalev: Biocenter, Tambov State Technical University, 392000 Tambov, Russia
Semen Dobkin: Head Specialized Design Bureau for a Complex of Equipment for the Microclimate, 224014 Brest, Belarus
Yuri Zhulaev: Head Specialized Design Bureau for a Complex of Equipment for the Microclimate, 224014 Brest, Belarus
Energies, 2022, vol. 15, issue 20, 1-14
Abstract:
Biomass can be considered an alternative to coal in the production of heat and electricity. Many types of biomass are waste from agriculture and the food industry. This waste is cheap, readily available, and replenished annually. However, most agricultural and food industry wastes (sugar cane pulp, olive and sunflower oil production wastes, straw, etc.) have ash with a low melting point. This leads to a rapid growth of ash deposits on the heating surfaces of boilers; as a result, the actual efficiency of boilers in which waste from agriculture and the food industry is burned is 45–50%. Known biomass pre-treatment technologies that allow for the fuel characteristics of biowaste. For example, leaching of biowaste in water at a temperature of 80–240 °C makes it possible to drastically reduce the content of alkali metal compounds in the ash, the presence of which reduces the melting point of the ash. However, this biomass pre-treatment technology is complex and requires additional costs for drying the treated biomass. We proposed to use torrefaction for pre-treatment of biomass, which makes it possible to increase the heat of combustion of biomass, increase the hydrophobicity of biomass, and reduce the cost of grinding it. However, we are not aware of studies that have studied the effect of torrefaction on the chemical composition of ash from the point of view of solving the problem of preventing the formation of agglomerates and reducing the growth rate of ash deposits on the convective heating surfaces of boilers. In this paper, the characteristics of sunflower husk subjected to torrefaction in an environment of superheated steam at a temperature of 300 °C and in an environment of gaseous products at a temperature of 250 °C are studied. All experiments were conducted using fluidized bed technology. The resulting biochar has a calorific value of 14.8–23% higher than the initial husk. To assess the behavior of sunflower husk ash, predictive coefficients were calculated. Torrefaction of sunflower husks does not exclude the possibility of slagging of the furnace but reduces the likelihood of slagging by 2.31–7.27 times. According to calculations, the torrefaction of sunflower husks reduces the likelihood of ash deposits on the convective heating surfaces of the boiler by 2.1–12.2 times. According to its fuel characteristics, the husk, after torrefaction in an environment of superheated steam, approaches wood waste, i.e., can be burned separately without additives or mixtures with other fuels with refractory ash.
Keywords: sunflower husk; ash; torrefaction; fluidized bed; predictive coefficients (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: Q Q0 Q4 Q40 Q41 Q42 Q43 Q47 Q48 Q49 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (1)
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