2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.biombioe.2020.105469
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Fuel characterization and thermal degradation kinetics of biomass from phytoremediation plants

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Cited by 27 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…They observed variation in plant composition and the thermogravimetric analysis due to differences in soil. Khanh-Quang et al [192] however, found higher phytoextraction potentials for Miscanthus compared to S. hermaphrodita and provided kinetic parameters to use as model and system design inputs.…”
Section: Phytoremediation and Phytostabilisationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They observed variation in plant composition and the thermogravimetric analysis due to differences in soil. Khanh-Quang et al [192] however, found higher phytoextraction potentials for Miscanthus compared to S. hermaphrodita and provided kinetic parameters to use as model and system design inputs.…”
Section: Phytoremediation and Phytostabilisationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Phytomanagement can provide financial benefits through planting valuable crops that serve as feedstock for multiple industries and end-products such as furniture, pulp and paper, biochemicals (adhesives and detergents), insulation and building materials, composites and plastic alternatives, food additives, animal feeding and bedding, etc. Some of these crops can also be used as bioenergy crops yielding high-quality biomass (Nsanganwimana et al, 2014(Nsanganwimana et al, , 2015Burges et al, 2018;Lacalle et al, 2018;Mench et al, 2018;Thijs et al, 2018) to produce renewable energy (electricity, heat and biofuels) (Gonsalvesh et al, 2016;Pandey et al, 2016;Rizwan et al, 2018;Grottola et al, 2019;Pogrzeba et al, 2019;Rusinowski et al, 2019;Sidhu et al, 2020;Tran et al, 2020 ). Most importantly, these crops offer the possibility to combine the production of biomass for energy production and/or other end-products (Grisan et al, 2016;Barla and Kumar, 2019) with TE phytoextraction or phytostabilization (Thijs et al, 2018;Chalot et al, 2020).…”
Section: Phytomanagement Benefits and Constraints-brief Overviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This crop prefers well-drained soils and grows worldwide over tropical and moderate cold temperatures. Miscanthus have an excellent ability to adapt to a wide range of environmental conditions and several genotypes can thrive under low temperatures (Clifton-Brown et al, 2001); in saline (Chen et al, 2017) and dry areas (Van der Weijde et al, 2017), marginal lands and TE-contaminated soils (Li G. Y. et al, 2011;Nsanganwimana et al, 2014Nsanganwimana et al, , 2015Rusinowski et al, 2019;Tran et al, 2020). However, frost (Clifton-Brown et al, 2001;Zub et al, 2012), and drought can impair Miscanthus establishment and survival, especially during the first year (Arnoult and Brancourt-Humel, 2015).…”
Section: Perennial Grass Cropsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Herbaceous biomass consists mainly of hemicellulose and cellulose and contains only a minor part of lignin. It is mostly represented by perennial plants, which in many cases are grown as crops [14,19,20]. One of the major problems that is especially related to the combustion of herbaceous biomass is high alkali (K, P) and chlorine content [21][22][23][24][25].…”
Section: The Problem Of the Fire-side Corrosionmentioning
confidence: 99%