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Pyrolysis of heavy metal contaminated Avicennia marina biomass from phytoremediation: Characterisation of biomass and pyrolysis products.

Authors :
He, Jing
Strezov, Vladimir
Kumar, Ravinder
Weldekidan, Haftom
Jahan, Sayka
Dastjerdi, Behnam Hosseini
Zhou, Xiaoteng
Kan, Tao
Source :
Journal of Cleaner Production. Oct2019, Vol. 234, p1235-1245. 11p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Sustainable management of contaminated biomass derived from phytoremediation of metal(loid) polluted soil and water is of great importance to avoid environmental risks from secondary pollution of the contaminants. In this regard, pyrolysis technology may reduce the environmental risk of the contaminants and produce different bio-products from contaminated biomass. In this work, slow pyrolysis of Avicennia marina biomass was conducted to compare the pyrolysis properties of heavy-metal-contaminated and uncontaminated biomass and its potential to generate pyrolytic products, such as biochar, bio-oil and pyrolytic gas at a varying temperature range from 300 to 800 °C. The results indicated that the properties of biomass and derivatives were affected significantly by both pyrolysis temperature and the presence of heavy metal(loid)s. The heavy metal(loid)s in biomass contributed to higher biochar and pyrolytic gas yields at the expense of bio-oil. Increasing pyrolysis temperature induced the volatilisation of heavy metal(loid)s in biochar samples. At the same pyrolysis temperature, the contaminants significantly increased the ash content whilst decreased the fixed carbon content in biochars (p < 0.05). Furthermore, it was noticed that the quality of bio-oils was improved by the presence of metal(loid)s, as the pyrolysis of contaminated biomass produced 8–11% hydrocarbons in the bio-oil samples with less oxygenated compounds as compared to uncontaminated biomass that produced only 4–5.8% hydrocarbons in the bio-oil. Moreover, biomass abound with trace metal(loid)s produced more H 2 and CO 2 during pyrolysis compared to uncontaminated biomass. Overall, this study demonstrated that pyrolysis is an efficient way for converting heavy metal contaminated biomass obtained from phytoremediation into valuable products, contributing to the sustainability of phytoremediation. Image 1062189 • Contaminated and uncontaminated biomass and pyrolytic products were studied. • Temperature and contaminants affected biomass and pyrolysis products properties. • The biochar yield was significantly increased with presence of heavy metal(loid)s. • Heavy metal(loid)s were enriched in biochars by pyrolysis at lower temperatures. • Hydrocarbons in bio-oils increased greatly with presence of heavy metal(loid)s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09596526
Volume :
234
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Cleaner Production
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
137683165
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2019.06.285