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Thermochemical conversion of raw and defatted algal biomass via hydrothermal liquefaction and slow pyrolysis
► HTL and pyrolysis bio-oils display similar elemental composition and IR spectra. ► Bio-oil chemistry is influenced by biomass composition and conversion method. ► Pyrolysis bio-oils exhibit lower Mw and boiling points compared to HTL bio-oils. ► HTL is more energetically favorable than pyrolysis f...
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Published in: | Bioresource technology 2012-04, Vol.109, p.178-187 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | ► HTL and pyrolysis bio-oils display similar elemental composition and IR spectra. ► Bio-oil chemistry is influenced by biomass composition and conversion method. ► Pyrolysis bio-oils exhibit lower Mw and boiling points compared to HTL bio-oils. ► HTL is more energetically favorable than pyrolysis for wet biomass (80% moisture). ► Low biomass moisture increases energetic favorability of thermochemical conversions.
Thermochemical conversion is a promising route for recovering energy from algal biomass. Two thermochemical processes, hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL: 300°C and 10–12MPa) and slow pyrolysis (heated to 450°C at a rate of 50°C/min), were used to produce bio-oils from Scenedesmus (raw and defatted) and Spirulina biomass that were compared against Illinois shale oil. Although both thermochemical conversion routes produced energy dense bio-oil (35–37MJ/kg) that approached shale oil (41MJ/kg), bio-oil yields (24–45%) and physico-chemical characteristics were highly influenced by conversion route and feedstock selection. Sharp differences were observed in the mean bio-oil molecular weight (pyrolysis 280–360Da; HTL 700–1330Da) and the percentage of low boiling compounds (bp |
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ISSN: | 0960-8524 1873-2976 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.biortech.2012.01.008 |