Agropellets are presented as a suitable product to be produced in certain agro-industries which could become Integrated Biomass Logistic Centres (IBLC) by taking advantage of its current resources during those periods in which their facilities are underused. Wheat straw and maize stalk were selected to be blended with forestry wood in an agro-industry dedicated to animal feed production. The materials were characterized to assess the quality of the input material. Taking into account the former, different pellets (blends of woody and herbaceous biomass) were produced and tested in a fixed bed reactor in order to study their combustion behaviour. Additionally, several predictive indexes were also calculated to assess sintering and deposition occurrence probability. Ash sintering degree was found to be directly related to composition and highly dependent on Si content. Moreover, an increase of the wood content in the blend did not proportionally imply a higher quality of the final blend, as would be expected. Regarding deposition, due to the high number of factors involved in this phenomenon, it has not been possible to draw clear conclusions. To do this, it was necessary to delve into the deposition mechanisms, which is addressed in the second part of this paper. Thus, despite the appearance of sintering and deposition phenomena, the combustion behaviour was satisfactory in the test carried out. Additionally, it has been demonstrated that agro-industries can act as IBLCs, producing blended pellet for the energy market that aligns with the standard ISO 17225-6.
Agrobiomass is presented as a suitable alternative to
contribute
to the fossil fuel decarbonization strategy at the European level.
To achieve the ambitious objectives established in this regard: (i)
new biomass resources need to be used and therefore initially tested
in order to confirm its potential for different applications, such
as energy production, and (ii) biomass supply capacity needs to be
enlarged; therefore, agroindustries converted into Integrated Biomass
Logistic Center (IBLC) can play a key role. In this research, eight
different agropellets (blends of wheat straw and maize stalk with
forestry wood) were produced in a IBLC and tested in a commercial
boiler, comparing the results with previous ones obtained in a fixed
bed reactor test campaign and to a base case (woody pellets). This
paper includes both individual results in terms of bottom ash, deposition,
and a final comparison of ash behavior in both facilities. All biofuels
tested showed an adequate performance in terms of efficiency and emissions,
being slightly better for the agropellets produced with wheat straw.
Regarding sintering and deposition, the tendencies found in the reactor
investigation were also observed in the commercial boiler. Moreover,
the assessment of the results from the boiler and reactor’s
tests proved that reactor experiments are representative and may be
used to test new biofuels more efficiently in terms of effort and
time allocated and could be used to predict sintering and deposition
phenomenon occurrence.
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