Abstract

Biomass-derived alcohols such as 5-Hydroxymethylfurfural represent a promising intermediary energy and species carriers for hydrogen and value‐added chemical production. Solar-driven reforming of biomass to 5-HMF at the desired reaction condition (e.g., at ~150 °C and ~5 bars) offers a sustainable route, but the lack of a rooftop-based solar biomass reactor represents a substantial impediment. In this work, a unique, low-profile “winged” solar concentrator with an evacuated tube reactor was designed for the renewable production of 5-HMF. The viability of this design was examined in detail, using sucrose as the feedstock for 5-HMF production in the presence of sulfuric acid. The optical study indicated that the winged structure significantly increased the effective concentration ratio (by ~42%) and that the design has a broader acceptance angle (from 60° to 90°) compared to CPC alone. During outdoor experiments, the wings boosted the thermal efficiency from 18% to ~25% when operating at 150 °C, and achieved a maximum 5-HMF yield of ~21 mol % (under a solar irradiance of ~800 W/m2). In parallel, a transient computational fluid dynamics model was developed to further elucidate the heat and mass transfer phenomena inside the reactor and to investigate a broader range of operating conditions and reactor design parameters. The numerical and experimental results were in agreement that a specific energy consumption for 5-HMF production of ~23 kWh/kg was achievable and that a full-scale system (~3 L reactor volume, 2.1 m2 gross area) can produce ~0.45 kg of 5-HMF per day, with an average daily solar input of 5 kWh/m2.

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