Fluidised Bed Reactors for the Thermochemical Conversion of Biomass and Waste

The growing population and economic development globally has led to increasing resource consumption and waste generation. This has generated concern at local, national and international levels on environmental issues including air quality, resource scarcity, waste management (including plastics) and...

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Main Authors: Stefano Iannello, Shane Morrin, Massimiliano Materazzi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hosokawa Powder Technology Foundation 2019-10-01
Series:KONA Powder and Particle Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/kona/37/0/37_2020016/_html/-char/en
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spelling doaj-47484969d6d84edca8403bea726c43f22021-02-03T00:41:42ZengHosokawa Powder Technology FoundationKONA Powder and Particle Journal0288-45342187-55372019-10-0137011413110.14356/kona.2020016konaFluidised Bed Reactors for the Thermochemical Conversion of Biomass and WasteStefano Iannello0Shane Morrin1Massimiliano Materazzi2Department of Chemical Engineering, University College London, UKDepartment of Chemical Engineering, University College London, UKDepartment of Chemical Engineering, University College London, UKThe growing population and economic development globally has led to increasing resource consumption and waste generation. This has generated concern at local, national and international levels on environmental issues including air quality, resource scarcity, waste management (including plastics) and global warming. The resulting antipathy towards fossil fuels and waste landfilling has spurred the demand for alternative bioenergy and biofuels production methods, making use of abundant biomass and waste feedstock. Although not new concepts, there has been renewed impetus recently to develop advanced thermochemical processes such as pyrolysis and gasification to treat biomass and municipal solid waste (including refuse-derived fuel therefrom). This is because these processes have the potential to add value to cheap and abundant materials by converting them into advanced biofuels and chemicals. The work presented in this paper is concerned principally with the technical analysis and review of new-generation, state-of-the-art systems based on fluidised bed reactors operated with biomass and solid waste. A comprehensive assessment of fluidised bed reactor types and operations is considered, with particular attention given to those processes aimed at the production of clean syngas for the subsequent synthesis of high-value products, including bio-hydrogen, synthetic natural gas (SNG), and liquid fuels.https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/kona/37/0/37_2020016/_html/-char/enfluidised bedswastethermochemical processeswaste-to-fuels
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stefano Iannello
Shane Morrin
Massimiliano Materazzi
spellingShingle Stefano Iannello
Shane Morrin
Massimiliano Materazzi
Fluidised Bed Reactors for the Thermochemical Conversion of Biomass and Waste
KONA Powder and Particle Journal
fluidised beds
waste
thermochemical processes
waste-to-fuels
author_facet Stefano Iannello
Shane Morrin
Massimiliano Materazzi
author_sort Stefano Iannello
title Fluidised Bed Reactors for the Thermochemical Conversion of Biomass and Waste
title_short Fluidised Bed Reactors for the Thermochemical Conversion of Biomass and Waste
title_full Fluidised Bed Reactors for the Thermochemical Conversion of Biomass and Waste
title_fullStr Fluidised Bed Reactors for the Thermochemical Conversion of Biomass and Waste
title_full_unstemmed Fluidised Bed Reactors for the Thermochemical Conversion of Biomass and Waste
title_sort fluidised bed reactors for the thermochemical conversion of biomass and waste
publisher Hosokawa Powder Technology Foundation
series KONA Powder and Particle Journal
issn 0288-4534
2187-5537
publishDate 2019-10-01
description The growing population and economic development globally has led to increasing resource consumption and waste generation. This has generated concern at local, national and international levels on environmental issues including air quality, resource scarcity, waste management (including plastics) and global warming. The resulting antipathy towards fossil fuels and waste landfilling has spurred the demand for alternative bioenergy and biofuels production methods, making use of abundant biomass and waste feedstock. Although not new concepts, there has been renewed impetus recently to develop advanced thermochemical processes such as pyrolysis and gasification to treat biomass and municipal solid waste (including refuse-derived fuel therefrom). This is because these processes have the potential to add value to cheap and abundant materials by converting them into advanced biofuels and chemicals. The work presented in this paper is concerned principally with the technical analysis and review of new-generation, state-of-the-art systems based on fluidised bed reactors operated with biomass and solid waste. A comprehensive assessment of fluidised bed reactor types and operations is considered, with particular attention given to those processes aimed at the production of clean syngas for the subsequent synthesis of high-value products, including bio-hydrogen, synthetic natural gas (SNG), and liquid fuels.
topic fluidised beds
waste
thermochemical processes
waste-to-fuels
url https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/kona/37/0/37_2020016/_html/-char/en
work_keys_str_mv AT stefanoiannello fluidisedbedreactorsforthethermochemicalconversionofbiomassandwaste
AT shanemorrin fluidisedbedreactorsforthethermochemicalconversionofbiomassandwaste
AT massimilianomaterazzi fluidisedbedreactorsforthethermochemicalconversionofbiomassandwaste
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