Abstract

Peat is the main type of peloid used in Polish cosmetic/healing spa facilities. Depending on treatment and origin, peat waste can be contaminated microbiologically, and as a result, it must be incinerated in medical waste incineration plants without energy recovery (local law). Such a situation leads to peat waste management costs increase. Therefore, in this work, we checked the possibility of peat waste upcycling to carbonized solid fuel (CSF) using torrefaction. Torrefaction is a thermal treatment process that removes microbiological contamination and improves the fuel properties of peat waste. In this work, the torrefaction conditions (temperature and time) on CSF quality were tested. Parallelly, peat decomposition kinetics using TGA and torrefaction kinetics with lifetime prediction using macro-TGA were determined. Furthermore, torrefaction theoretical mass and energy balance were determined. The results were compared with reference material (wood), and as a result, obtained data can be used to adjust currently used wood torrefaction technologies for peat torrefaction. The results show that torrefaction improves the high heating value of peat waste from 19.0 to 21.3 MJ × kg−1, peat main decomposition takes place at 200–550 °C following second reaction order (n = 2), with an activation energy of 33.34 kJ × mol−1, and pre-exponential factor of 4.40 × 10−1 s−1. Moreover, differential scanning calorimetry analysis revealed that peat torrefaction required slightly more energy than wood torrefaction, and macro-TGA showed that peat torrefaction has lower torrefaction constant reaction rates (k) than wood 1.05 × 10−5–3.15 × 10−5 vs. 1.43 × 10−5–7.25 × 10−5 s−1.

Highlights

  • Peloids are commonly used in spa treatment and cosmetology for cosmetic and healing purposes

  • Waste peloids generated in beauty salons are safe, but ones from spa centers may be microbiologically contaminated, and in such a situation, peat waste (PW) must be considered as medical waste, requiring a special waste treatments method, e.g., waste incineration

  • The raw peat used in this study had 84.8% of moisture content, and its dry mass was characterized by 59.3%, 26.3%, and 14.4% content of volatile matter (VM), fixed carbon (FC), and ash content (AC), respectively

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Peloids are commonly used in spa treatment and cosmetology for cosmetic and healing purposes. Leśniak [2] shows that a typical SPA facility in Poland uses from 2.90 to 3.42 Mg of peat yearly. Assuming an average value of 3.16 Mg × year−1 and a current number of spa facilities (103), the annual peat waste (PW) production counts about 324 Mg [2]. Waste peloids generated in beauty salons are safe, but ones from spa centers may be microbiologically contaminated, and in such a situation, PW must be considered as medical waste, requiring a special waste treatments method, e.g., waste incineration. We check the validity of thermal upcycling of medical/cosmetic peat waste into high-quality solid fuel, free of possible infectious substances using the torrefaction process

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call