1. Role of ambient pressure in self-heating torrefaction of dairy cattle manure
- Author
-
Kazunori Iwabuchi, Katsumori Taniguro, Siyao Chen, Takanori Itoh, and Naohiro Maemoku
- Subjects
Fossil Fuels ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,Physical Chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochar ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Materials ,Multidisciplinary ,Moisture ,Atmospheric pressure ,Organic Compounds ,Chemistry ,Chemical Reactions ,Agriculture ,Deoxygenation ,Coal ,Atmospheric Pressure ,Charcoal ,Physical Sciences ,Engineering and Technology ,Medicine ,Organic Materials ,Research Article ,Chemical Elements ,Ambient pressure ,Livestock ,Science ,020209 energy ,Materials Science ,Dry basis ,Fuels ,Heating ,Animal science ,Oxidation ,Animals ,Cellulose ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Organic Chemistry ,Chemical Compounds ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Torrefaction ,Manure ,Carbon ,Oxygen ,Energy and Power ,Chemical Properties ,Cattle ,Heat of combustion - Abstract
This paper describes the role of ambient pressure in self-heating torrefaction of livestock manure. We explored the initiating temperatures required to cause self-heating of wet dairy cattle manure at different ambient pressures (0.1, 0.4, 0.7, and 1.0 MPa). Then, we conducted proximate, elemental, and calorific analyses of biochar torrefied at 210, 250, and 290 degrees C. The results showed that self-heating was induced at 155 degrees C or higher for 0.1 MPa and at 115 degrees C or lower for 0.4 MPa or higher. The decrease of the initiating temperature at elevated pressure was due not only to more oxygen, but also to the retention of moisture that can promote chemical oxidation of manure. Biochar yields decreased with increasing torrefaction temperature and pressure, and the yield difference at 0.1 and 1.0 MPa was more substantial at lower temperatures: a 29.8, 16.4, and 9.4% difference at 210, 250, and 290 degrees C, respectively. Proximate and elemental analyses showed that elevated pressure promotes devolatilization, deoxygenation, and coalification compared to atmospheric pressure; its impact, however, was less at higher temperatures as the torrefaction temperature became more dominant. Calorific analysis revealed that elevated pressure can increase the higher heating value (HHV) on a dry and ash-free basis at 210 degrees C because of the increase in carbon content, but its impact is limited at 250 and 290 degrees C. Meanwhile, the HHV on a dry basis exhibited the opposite trend due primarily to an enlargement of ash content. The present study revealed that ambient pressure considerably affects the initiating temperature of self-heating and the chemical properties of biochar at a low torrefaction temperature.
- Published
- 2020