Process intensification of biomass fast pyrolysis through autothermal operation of a fluidized bed reactor | AIChE

Process intensification of biomass fast pyrolysis through autothermal operation of a fluidized bed reactor

TitleProcess intensification of biomass fast pyrolysis through autothermal operation of a fluidized bed reactor
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuthorsPolin, JP, Peterson, CA, Whitmer, LE, Smith, RG, Brown, RC
JournalApplied Energy
Volume249
Pagination276–285
Date Publishedsep
ISSN03062619
Keywords7.4, Autothermal, BP5Q4, Fast pyrolysis, Fluidized bed, Process intensification, Project 7.4, Renewable Bioproducts
Abstract

Heat transfer is the bottleneck to fast pyrolysis of biomass. Although the enthalpy for pyrolysis of biomass is relatively small operation at temperatures around 500 °C constrains heat carrier selection to inert gases and granular media that can sustain only modest thermal fluxes in practical pyrolysis systems. With heat transfer controlling the rate of pyrolysis, reactor capacity only scales as the square of reactor diameter and does not benefit from economies of scale in building larger reactors. We have eliminated this heat transfer bottleneck by replacing it with partial oxidation of pyrolysis products to provide the enthalpy for pyrolysis in a fluidized bed reactor, a process that can be described as autothermal pyrolysis. The oxygen-to-biomass equivalence ratio depends upon the kind of biomass being pyrolyzed and the level of parasitic heat losses from the reactor, but under conditions that simulate adiabatic operation, equivalence ratios are around 0.10, compared to 0.20 or higher for autothermal gasifiers. At this low equivalence ratio, there was no significant loss in bio-oil yield when operating the reactor autothermally (64.8 wt%) as compared to conventional pyrolysis (64.4 wt%). Carbon balances indicate that less valuable pyrolysis products (char and aqueous, bio-oil light ends) are consumed via partial oxidative reactions to provide the enthalpy for pyrolysis. While the carbon yields of char and bio-oil light ends decreased by 25.0% and 21.3%, respectively, the most valuable pyrolysis product (bio-oil heavy ends) only decreased 8.0%.

URLhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0306261919308141
DOI10.1016/j.apenergy.2019.04.154