Abstract

Development of an accurate and computational efficient biomass particle model to predict particle pyrolysis and combustion is the focus of this paper. Partial differential equations (PDEs) for heat and mass balance are transformed into a system of coupled ordinary differential equations (ODEs) with the use of orthogonal collocation as the particle discretization method. The orthogonal collocation method is incorporated with comprehensive physicochemical mechanisms to predict the behavior of biomass components during particle pyrolysis and combustion. Heat adsorption by evaporated gas and water movement by diffusion inside the biomass matrix are included in the present work, in parallel with the effect of Stefan flow on the heat and mass transfer rates at the particle surface. Abandoning the classical interface-based modelling approach, the present approach allows decoupling between biomass components and spatial resolution, and the prediction of continuous intra-particle profiles.The new particle model is proven to be accurate and stable through its high degree of agreement with simulation results for particle pyrolysis and combustion experiments using different particle moisture contents and geometrical shapes. The intra-particle temperature gradient, as well as particle mass and size evolution, can be predicted accurately, as validated against experimental data. It is shown that six collocation points provide satisfying resolution. The computational efficiency is confirmed by the short simulation time that was found to be approximately three orders of magnitude faster than mesh-based simulations. This implies that the current model can be used for computational fluid dynamic (CFD) analysis through implementation as sub-grid-scale models to design, for example, biomass furnaces.

Highlights

  • The rising demand for the worldwide energy and the worldwide concern for global warming due to CO2 emission has accelerated global interest in alternative energy conversion from biomass [1,2]

  • The accuracy of the orthogonal collocation method was evaluated by comparisons with the pyrolysis and combustion experiments for single biomass particles reported by Lu et al [12]

  • By abandoning the classical formulation for lumped models, i.e. interface-based models, the current approach allows decoupling between biomass components and spatial resolution and the prediction of continuous intra-particle profiles

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Summary

Introduction

The rising demand for the worldwide energy and the worldwide concern for global warming due to CO2 emission has accelerated global interest in alternative energy conversion from biomass [1,2]. The mesh-based discretization allows the highest accuracy since it provides resolution of intra-particle profiles and the simultaneous existence of biomass components, which can be maintained This discretization method, thereby, allows detailed resolution of the complex phenomena occurring inside single particles, which could not be handled by the interface discretization model [23]. The accuracy of this model requires the utilization of a fine computational grid. The main advantages of the orthogonal collocation approach include the improved prediction of intra-particle profiles, the ability to decouple resolution from biomass components, and it allows parallel reactions to be handled as the mesh-based model while maintaining a sufficiently low computational effort. Additional testing of numerical accuracy, efficiency, and stability was conducted to measure how robust the proposed model was in predicting single biomass particle pyrolysis and combustion behavior

Biomass decomposition
Model formulation and governing equations
Discretization by orthogonal collocation
Source term calculation
Model assessment
Grid independence
Source term evaluation
Influence of moving coordinates
Effect of Stefan flow
Results and discussion
Biomass pyrolysis
Biomass combustion
Computational efficiency
Findings
Conclusion and recommendations
Full Text
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