Abstract

Woody biomass is densified in the form of pellets in order to improve its physical and mechanical properties during handling and storage. However, limited research work has been conducted on the mechanical properties of pellets made from agricultural and wood biomass blends. Two commonly available forestry biomass, spruce (S) and pine (P), and three agricultural biomasses, reed canary grass (RCG), timothy hay (H) and switchgrass (SW), were used to form pellets. The mechanical properties were evaluated for three different particle sizes (150-300, 300-425 and 425-600μm). An Instron attached with an in-house built single unit pelletizer and temperature controlled die was employed to produce a pellet. The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of particle size and blending (agricultural and woody biomass) on the mechanical properties (density and intrinsic yield stress). For all biomasses, pellets made from lower particle size (150-300μm) exhibited higher density (950-1178kg/m3 for spruce and pine; 668-800kg/m3 for RCG, H and SW; 900-970kg/m3 for blended biomass). The intrinsic yield stress exhibited differences in values for individual forestry (40MPa) and agricultural biomass (27-48MPa), however after blending the values converged closest to that value for forestry biomass. In conclusion, blending low cost and abundant available agricultural biomass with woody biomass could not only result in better mechanical properties but would also help to meet the pellet market demand in future.

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