Abstract

More than 1.3 billion tons, a third of the total food produced, is wasted annually, and it has been predicted to increase in the coming years. Food waste significantly contributes to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions resulting in the release of about 3.3 billion tonnes of CO2 into the environment yearly. Hence this large amount of wastes, with adverse environmental effects, needs to be appropriately managed. New technologies such as Anaerobic digestion, fermentation, and gasification are being used to produce renewable energy, which in turn reduces the increasing level of food wastes in the environment. Pyrolysis of biomass materials or food wastes produces high-value energy products or bio-oil that can possibly replace non-renewable fossil fuels when it is upgraded.In this study, pyrolysis (thermal treatment in the absence of oxygen) of plantain and yam peels to produce bio-oil, was investigated. The pyrolysis conditions, wide temperature ranges at an interval of 100 °C (200–700 °C), absence of a catalyst (AOC), the use of zeolite –Y catalyst using two separate heterogeneous catalysis procedures were imposed and used to produced bio-oil. In the first procedure, the pyrolysis gases were allowed to rise through a zeolite-Y catalyst bed (HTC). And in the second procedure, the plantain or yam peel feedstock was first mixed uniformly with the zeolite-Y catalyst before pyrolysis (HMC). The GC–MS machine was used to analyze or characterize the obtained bio-oil while proximate analysis and XRF machine were used to characterize the plantain and yam peels feed. The residue, biochar, from the pyrolysis process, was also characterized using the XRF machine.

Highlights

  • Experimental dataset investigating the effect of temperature in the presence or absence of catalysts on the pyrolysis of plantain and yam peels for bio-oil production

  • Food waste significantly contributes to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions resulting in the release of about 3.3 billion tonnes of CO2 into the environment yearly

  • Raw The parameters considered were: yield and composition of the bio-oil and biochar obtained at the different temperatures, in the absence of a catalyst, and the presence of zeolite-Y catalyst using two heterogeneous catalysis procedures, HTC and HMC respectively

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Summary

Data Article

Food waste significantly contributes to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions resulting in the release of about 3.3 billion tonnes of CO2 into the environment yearly. This large amount of wastes, with adverse environmental effects, needs to be appropriately managed. Pyrolysis (thermal treatment in the absence of oxygen) of plantain and yam peels to produce bio-oil, was investigated. Akinneye and A.O. Ayeni et al / Data in Brief 31 (2020) 105804 used to produced bio-oil. In the second procedure, the plantain or yam peel feedstock was first mixed uniformly with the zeolite-Y catalyst before pyrolysis (HMC). The residue, biochar, from the pyrolysis process, was characterized using the XRF machine

Data source location Data accessibility
Yam Percentage Yield
Percentage Yield from Plantain peel
Peak Retention Time Area Percentage IUPAC Nomenclature
IUPAC Nomenclature
Peak Retention Time
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