Abstract

Currently, many scientists worldwide are studying the recycling or reuse of waste materials to make useful products. For example, silicate-based wastes have been studied for use as raw material in the ceramic industry. Although numerous types of waste have been studied, sugarcane bagasse ash (SCBA) has been overlooked, probably because this type of residue is more common in developing countries that produce sugar and alcohol from sugarcane. Bagasse is a by-product of the cane sugar industry. Brazil is the world’s largest producer of alcohol and sugar from sugarcane and has an extensive alternative program for automobile fuel. The new technology of flex-fuel (alcohol/gasoline) vehicles, developed in the 1990s and applied to new cars in 2003 revived the Brazilian PROALCOOL program. Today, several million flex-fuel cars are in use, and more than 85% of the new cars produced in the country run on this system (ProAlcool 2011; History of ethanol fuel in Brazil 2011; Goldemberg 2008). In the production of sugar and alcohol, sugarcane is ground and the resulting juice is extracted to obtain sugar or used in a fermentation process to produce alcohol. The fibrous matter that remains after sugarcane has been crushed to extract the juice is called bagasse (or “bagaco,” in Portuguese). There are many applications and much research effort is directed at exploring the potential of bagasse as a renewable power generation source, for the production of bio-based materials (for example, bioethanol and briquettes or pellets), cattle feed, building materials, etc. Basically, bagasse is a fibrous material containing cellulose (~50%), hemicellulose and lignin as the major (~95%) compounds. There are also waxes, inorganic materials and/or salts inside the plant tissues that will result in the final ash (oxides and carbonates) after firing (Pandey et al. 2000). Although there is a great deal of research in Brazil on sugarcane bagasse briquetting, showing the many advantages of using briquettes instead of bagasse, factories still burn bagasse. Currently, sugarcane bagasse is used as a primary fuel source in sugar mills. It is burned in a boiler to produce steam which is utilized in the factory’s processes and also to power turbines for the production of electrical energy. Today, the cogeneration of electricity by sugar and alcohol mills accounts for ca. 5% of the total electricity produced in Brazil

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