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Preliminary investigation on the production of fuels and bio-char from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii biomass residue after bio-hydrogen production

Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries ; Bioresource Technology, 102(18), p.8707-8713, 2011Trabajos contenidos:
  • Torri, C
  • Samorì, C
  • Adamiano, A
  • Fabbri, D
  • Faraloni, C
  • Torzillo, G
Tema(s): Recursos en línea: Resumen: The aim of this work was to investigate the potential conversion of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii biomass harvested after hydrogen production. The spent algal biomass was converted into nitrogen-rich bio-char, biodiesel and pyrolysis oil (bio-oil). The yield of lipids (algal oil), obtained by solvent extraction, was 15 ± 2 percent w/w(dry-biomass). This oil was converted into biodiesel with a 8.7 ± 1 percent w/w(dry-biomass)yield. The extraction residue was pyrolysed in a fixed bed reactor at 350 °C obtaining bio-char as the principal fraction (44 ± 1 percent w/w(dry-biomass)) and 28 ± 2 percent w/w(dry-biomass)of bio-oil. Pyrolysis fractions were characterized by elemental analysis, while the chemical composition of bio-oil was fully characterized by GC-MS, using various derivatization techniques. Energy outputs resulting from this approach were distributed in hydrogen (40 percent), biodiesel (12 percent)and pyrolysis fractions (48 percent), whereas bio-char was the largest fraction in terms of mass.
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The aim of this work was to investigate the potential conversion of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii biomass harvested after hydrogen production. The spent algal biomass was converted into nitrogen-rich bio-char, biodiesel and pyrolysis oil (bio-oil). The yield of lipids (algal oil), obtained by solvent extraction, was 15 ± 2 percent w/w(dry-biomass). This oil was converted into biodiesel with a 8.7 ± 1 percent w/w(dry-biomass)yield. The extraction residue was pyrolysed in a fixed bed reactor at 350 °C obtaining bio-char as the principal fraction (44 ± 1 percent w/w(dry-biomass)) and 28 ± 2 percent w/w(dry-biomass)of bio-oil. Pyrolysis fractions were characterized by elemental analysis, while the chemical composition of bio-oil was fully characterized by GC-MS, using various derivatization techniques. Energy outputs resulting from this approach were distributed in hydrogen (40 percent), biodiesel (12 percent)and pyrolysis fractions (48 percent), whereas bio-char was the largest fraction in terms of mass.

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