Abstract

Thermochemical conversion provides promising approaches for utilization of agroforestry residues as energy sources in rural areas, such as decentralized biomass combustion and gasification. Understanding of the pyrolysis characteristics are crucial for the design of reactors and optimization of working conditions, but in these scenarios, utilization of centimeter-sized large fuel particles will bring challenges in predicting the evolution of pyrolytic products owing to the intraparticle secondary reactions. In this work, the product distribution of biomass pyrolysis was investigated in wide ranges of temperatures and particle sizes, and special attention was paid to the pyrolysis of centimeter-sized fuel particles under medium to high temperatures (500 °C – 900 °C). The yields of solid/liquid/gas-phase products were quantified, and the composition of tar and gas products were qualitatively and quantitatively evaluated, aiming at illustrating the effects of intraparticle secondary reactions. The results have shown that the differences between the product distribution of sawdust (<1 mm) and centimeter-sized wood cubes were significant over the whole temperature range, but the differences between wood cubes with varying sizes (1 cm, 1.5 cm and 2 cm) were dependent with the external temperature, indicating that the extent of intraparticle secondary reactions was simultaneously determined by external temperature and particle size. The evolution of tar composition indicated that the intraparticle secondary reactions could be divided into two distinctive steps. Increasing the particle size would firstly result in fast consumption of primary tar species and emergence of secondary tar species, while the second step would lead to the formation of simple phenols and aromatics, and large quantities of PAHs were released for centimeter-sized fuel particle under high temperatures (≥800 °C). Kinetic analysis further revealed that the first step was mainly transport controlled and sensitive to particle size, while the second step was jointly controlled by kinetics and transport, which appeared to be significant only if the particle size was large and simultaneously the temperature was sufficiently high.

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