Reprint

Woody Biomass for Bioenergy Production

Edited by
March 2021
180 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03943-993-5 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-03943-994-2 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Woody Biomass for Bioenergy Production that was published in

Chemistry & Materials Science
Engineering
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Physical Sciences
Summary
Woody biomass is most widely used for energy production. In the United States, roughly 2% of the energy consumed annually is generated from wood and wood-derived fuels. Woody biomass needs to be preprocessed and pretreated before it is used for energy production. Preprocessing and pretreatments improve the physical, chemical, and rheological properties, making them more suitable for feeding, handling, storage transportation, and conversion. Mechanical preprocessing technologies such as size reduction and densification, help improve particle size distribution and density. Thermal pretreatment can reduce grinding energy and torrefied ground biomass has improved sphericity, particle surface area, and particle size distribution. This book focuses on several specific topics, such as understanding how forest biomass for biofuels impacts greenhouse gas emissions; mechanical preprocessing, such as densification of forest residue biomass, to improve physical properties such as size, shape, and density; the impact of thermal pretreatment temperatures on woody biomass chemical composition, physical properties, and microstructure for thermochemical conversions such as pyrolysis and gasification; the grindability of torrefied pellets; use of wood for gasification and as a filter for tar removal; and understanding the pyrolysis kinetics of biomass using thermogravimetric analyzers.
Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
grindability; torrefied biomass; pellet; energy consumption; co-firing; biomass; gasification; tar; syngas cleaning; dry filter; pyrolysis; chemical composition; micro-structure; physical properties; scanning electron microscopy; wood; thermal pretreatment; torrefaction; timber; harvest residues; ethanol; GHG savings; Michigan; biomass; variety and rootstock selection; almond tree; agricultural practices; halophytes; Phoenix dactylifera; Salicornia bigelovii; thermogravimetric analysis; torrefied biomass; correlation; ultimate analysis; solid yield; heating value; OLS; 2-inch top pine residue + switchgrass blends; pelleting process variables; pellet quality; specific energy consumption; response surface models; hybrid genetic algorithm; pelleting; functional groups; biomass; pellet strength; combustion efficiency; forest biomass; Australia; biomass energy potential; emission; bioenergy