Abstract

Nearly all existing commercial pyrolysis technologies employ single-step rapid condensation of vapours from 500 oC to 50 oC using sprays of cold bio-oil or liquid hydrocarbon as a quench fluid. This approach produces raw bio-oil, a non-homogenous mixture of hundreds of oxygenated organic compounds including organic acids and water. Single-step quench also results in loss of high quality heat to the ambient. In this work, a novel 3-stage fractional condensation approach has been proposed. The intent is to produce targeted stable products for value added applications as well to enhance the overall efficiency of pyrolysis processes. The first phase of this research involved modelling and simulation of staged condensation of pyrolysis vapours using Pro/2 process software. A comprehensive pyrolysis model with 13 representative compounds was developed and validated. The Pro/2 model is able to simulate complex condensation of lignin and sugar fractions at high temperatures. Multiple cases involving staged condensation in ablative and fluid bed pyrolysis systems were investigated. In each case, there was a trade-off between high-quality heat recovery and early separation of lignin and sugars from organic acids. Results demonstrated that dew point depression adds additional complexity and limits heat recovery. However, judicious selection of condenser temperatures offers opportunity for early isolation of sugars and lignin from acids, thereby improving product stability.

Highlights

  • Pyrolysis is the endothermic decomposition of complex biomass materials at high temperatures in the absence of air or oxygen

  • While the fluid bed reactor achieve high heat transfer rates by using very small biomass feed size entrained by heated inert gases, the ablative systems use relative motion of biomass feed and a heated surface creating ablation and high heat transfer coefficients [3,4,5]

  • The objective of this study is to develop a preliminary process model for heat recovery and product stabilization in biomass fast pyrolysis processes and simulate multistage condensation and product fractionation for ablative and fluid-bed pyrolysis systems

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Summary

Introduction

Pyrolysis is the endothermic decomposition of complex biomass materials at high temperatures in the absence of air or oxygen. Many new reactor configurations have been proposed for rapid heating of biomass particles in fast pyrolysis [2,3]. These configurations include shallow moving beds or transported beds (vacuum pyrolysis), auger reactors, fluid beds and ablative reactors. Most of the existing pyrolysis technologies employ single step rapid condensation of pyrolysis vapours from 500 oC to 50 oC using sprays of cold bio-oil (or liquid hydrocarbon) as a quench fluid (See Fig. 1)

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