posted on 2020-02-10, 19:36authored byJordan Klinger, Daniel L. Carpenter, Vicki S. Thompson, Neal Yancey, Rachel M. Emerson, Katherine R. Gaston, Kristin Smith, Michael Thorson, Huamin Wang, Daniel M. Santosa, Igor Kutnyakov
Here,
we report on the effects of loblolly pine residue variability
on material throughput, pilot plant uptime, operator intervention,
product yield, and product quality for grinding, fast pyrolysis, and
hydrotreating operations. Preprocessing throughput using a hammer
mill varied between 31 and 48% of nameplate capacity (5 tons/h). Grinder
overloads in the size reduction step were more prevalent for lower
ash and higher moisture materials. Fast pyrolysis throughput varied
between 57 and 72% of nameplate capacity (20 kg/h), and bio-oil yields
varied between 46 and 53% (feedstock carbon to oil, dry basis). During
fast pyrolysis operations, downtime was caused by bridging in the
feed and char removal systems and plugging in the condensation system.
Cohesion of feedstock and char leading to system plugging was less
frequent for higher ash feedstocks, and differences in condenser plugging
behavior between high and low ash feedstocks were observed. The catalyst
stability of the bio-oil stabilization step was strongly dependent
on the sulfur content in the bio-oil, which was higher for the high-ash
residue oils. Lower moisture content in the starting biomass was consistent
with lower sulfur content in bio-oil. Yields and properties of hydrotreated
fuel products showed minimal deference among the bio-oils.