Emissions and Combustion Characteristics of Torrefied Wood Pellets

Authors

  • Joseph Adeola Fuwape Department of Forestry and Wood Technology, Federal University of Technology, Akure, Nigeria (Home University); Visiting scholar, Department of Forest Biomaterials, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, USA 27615
  • Emmanuel Uchechukwu Opara Wood Biology and Wood Products Department, University of Goettingen, Büsgenweg 4, 37077 Göttingen, Germany

Keywords:

Torrefaction, Biomass, Pellets, Heating values, Emissions

Abstract

The influence of torrefaction temperature on the durability, combustion characteristics, and emissions of CO, CO2, NOX, and particulate matter (PM) from biomass pellets was studied. The pellets were torrefied under inert conditions at 225, 250, and 300 °C for 60 min. Physical properties, such as weight loss, fines percentage, pellet durability index (PDI), and water absorption, were evaluated using ISO standards. The weight loss increased with higher torrefaction temperatures. Torrefied pellets had lower water absorption than untreated pellets. Fines percentage increased with torrefaction temperature while PDI decreased. Torrefied pellets at 300 °C had the lowest PDI (82.7%), while 225 °C had the highest (98.0%). The energy density and heating values increased with torrefaction temperature from 22.0 MJ/kg at 225 °C to 29.9 MJ/kg at 300 °C compared to 18.9 MJ/kg for untorrefied pellets. There were reductions in CO, CO2, and NOX emissions with an increase in torrefaction temperature while PM slightly reduced. This study found that torrefied biomass pellets had lower CO2 emissions than raw pellets.

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Published

2023-11-08

Issue

Section

Research Article or Brief Communication