Demonstrating the Suitability of Tamarind Residues to Bioenergy Exploitation Via Combustion Through Physicochemical Properties, Performance Indexes, and Emission Characteristics

BioEnergy Research - Tập 13 - Trang 1308-1320 - 2020
José Luiz Francisco Alves1, Jean Constantino Gomes da Silva1, Guilherme Davi Mumbach1, Michele Di Domenico2, Rennio Felix de Sena3, Ricardo Antonio Francisco Machado1, Cintia Marangoni1
1Graduate Program in Chemical Engineering (PósENQ), Department of Chemical Engineering and Food Engineering (EQA), Federal University of Santa Catarina (UFSC), Florianópolis, Brazil
2Academic Department of Engineering, Federal University of Technology—Paraná (UTFPR), Francisco Beltrão, Brazil
3Laboratory of Activated Carbon (LCA), Department of Chemical Engineering (DEQ), Federal University of Paraíba (UFPB), João Pessoa, Brazil

Tóm tắt

Clean thermochemical conversion of lignocellulosic residues is particularly interesting for both bioenergy production and environmental protection. For this reason, the novelty of this study is to present tamarind residues (husks and seeds) from the tamarind fruit processing industry as new prospective feedstocks for bioenergy production considering their physicochemical properties, combustion performance indexes, and emission patterns. Characterization results confirmed the suitability of tamarind residues as raw materials for combustion with considerable energy contents (~ 17.5 MJ kg−1), ash contents below 2.9 wt.%, and negligible sulfur (< 0.01 wt.%). High bulk (552.7–635.8 kg m−3) and bioenergy (9.1–10.4 GJ m−3) densities were found, indicating that the distribution and utilization of tamarind residues are significantly favored. Acceptable CO2, CO, and SO2 emissions were found during the combustion of both residues. Elevated nitrogen concentrations (2.5–3.0 wt.%) were reported, implying higher NOX emissions (8.8–10.5 g kg−1), which require rigid control. The combustion performance indices suggest that tamarind residues have better properties for combustion than feedstocks commonly used as bioenergy sources. Tamarind residues thus appear to be promising renewable feedstocks for bioenergy because of their attractive properties, better combustion performance, and acceptable emission characteristics. This study conclusively indicates that tamarind residues are promising feedstocks for bioenergy and provides valuable insights to their future applications in commercial biomass boilers with controlled emissions.

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