Abstract

A huge amount of palm waste generated daily represents a problematic high-moisture waste to be disposed of, yet it also represents a promising biomass resource to be transformed into a value-added product. A single-mode microwave hydrothermal carbonization process incorporating steam purging was developed and utilised to convert high-moisture palm waste into hydrochar over a range of process temperatures from 150 to 300 °C. The microwave hydrothermal carbonization recorded a shorter process duration (10 min) and prevented the occurrence of hot spots within the reactor. The resulting hydrochar showed up to 94.3 wt% of mass yield, 69.2 wt% of fixed carbon, and 412.3 m2/g of surface area. The subsequent application of the hydrochar in de-chlorination of domestic water demonstrated an impressive removal performance of up to 98.9% of free chlorine, exhibiting 435 min of breakthrough time, and 40.0 mg/g of bed capacity in continuous column operation. The results show great promise of microwave hydrothermal carbonization as a desirable approach to produce desirable hydrochar for de-chlorination application.

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