METHOD FOR PREPARING BIOCHAR
20210155867 · 2021-05-27
Inventors
Cpc classification
C10B57/14
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C10L5/447
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Y02E50/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
B01J29/40
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A method for preparing biochar, including steps as follows: dosing: putting pre-crushed biomass into a reactor; charring conversion: heating the reactor to a certain temperature and pressure, and putting an active group-containing active agent containing 1% to 5% by mass of biomass and a catalyst containing 1% to 10% by mass of biomass (or putting the catalyst first and then putting the active agent) into the reactor to perform solid solution charring on the biomass; and cooling: after the charring conversion is completed, cooling the reactor to 40° C. or lower to obtain the biochar. Feedstocks are abundant and cheap, farmland biomass waste is reused, and the active group-containing active agent is added in biomass charring, which can effectively inhibit side reactions and coordinate with the catalyst to perform solid solution charring on the biomass, thereby improving a biochar conversion rate and making the charring process clean and environmentally friendly.
Claims
1. A method for preparing biochar, comprising steps as follows: dosing: putting pre-crushed biomass into a reactor; charring conversion: heating the reactor to a certain temperature and pressure, and putting an active group-containing active agent containing 1% to 5% by mass of biomass and a catalyst containing 1% to 10% by mass of biomass into the reactor to perform solid solution charring on the biomass; and cooling: after the charring conversion is completed, cooling the reactor to 40° C. or lower to obtain the biochar.
2. A method for preparing biochar, comprising steps as follows: dosing: mixing pre-crushed biomass with a catalyst and then putting the mixture into a reactor, in which a mass ratio of the biomass to the catalyst is 90 to 99 : 10 to 1; charring conversion: heating the reactor to a certain temperature and pressure, and putting an active group-containing active agent containing 1% to 5% by mass of biomass into the reactor to perform solid solution charring on the biomass; and cooling: after the charring conversion is completed, cooling the reactor to 40° C. or lower to obtain the biochar.
3. The method for preparing biochar according to claim 1, wherein the reactive group include one or more of carboxyl, hydroxyl, carbonyl, and methoxy.
4. The method for preparing biochar according to claim 3, wherein a content of the carboxyl is 10% to 25% of the active agent, a content of the hydroxyl is 4% to 10% of the active agent, a content of the carbonyl is 13% to 25% of the active agent, and a content of the methoxy is 5% to 15% of the active agent.
5. The method for preparing biochar according to claim 3, wherein the hydroxyl is contained in a carboxylic acid, propylene glycol methyl ether acetate, an acrylic acid modified resin, an acid radical, or a polycarboxylic acid.
6. The method for preparing biochar according to claim 1, wherein the catalyst is a potassium salt, a calcium salt, a transition metal salt, a metal oxide, or a molecular sieve catalyst.
7. The method for preparing biochar according to claim 6, wherein the metal oxide is Al.sub.2O.sub.3, MgO, or SiO.sub.2, and the molecular sieve catalyst is a Y, β, or ZSM-5 molecular sieve.
8. The method for preparing biochar according to claim 1, wherein the charring conversion step has a process temperature of 200° C. to 800° C. and charring time of 10 min to 120 min.
9. The method for preparing biochar according to claim 1, wherein when the active agent is put in, a temperature range of the reactor is 220° C. to 580° C., and a pressure range of the reactor is 0.01 MPa to 10.0 MPa.
10. The method for preparing biochar according to claim 1, further comprising a drying step and a pre-charring step before the charring conversion step, wherein a process temperature of the drying step is 120° C. to 150° C., and a process temperature of the pre-charring step is 150° C. to 220° C.
Description
EXAMPLE 1
[0034] Dosing: putting pre-crushed corn stalks or granules into a reactor;
[0035] charring conversion: heating the reactor to 220° C., and putting a carboxylic acid containing 1% by mass of biomass and a calcium salt containing 1% by mass of biomass into the reactor to perform solid solution charring on the biomass; and
[0036] cooling: after the charring conversion is completed, cooling the reactor to 40° C. or lower to obtain the biochar.
EXAMPLE 2
[0037] Dosing: putting pre-crushed rice hulls or granules into a reactor;
[0038] charring conversion: heating the reactor to 300° C., and putting carboxyl containing 5% by mass of biomass and a transition metal salt containing 10% by mass of biomass into the reactor to perform solid solution charring on the biomass; and
[0039] cooling: after the charring conversion is completed, cooling the reactor to 40° C. or lower to obtain the biochar.
EXAMPLE 3
[0040] Dosing: putting pre-crushed wood bits or granules into a reactor;
[0041] charring conversion: heating the reactor to 350° C., and putting carbonyl containing 3% by mass of biomass and a Y molecular sieve containing 5% by mass of biomass into the reactor to perform solid solution charring on the biomass; and
[0042] cooling: after the charring conversion is completed, cooling the reactor to 40° C. or lower to obtain the biochar.
EXAMPLE 4
[0043] Dosing: mixing pre-crushed corn stalks or granules with a 1% calcium salt and then putting the mixture into a reactor;
[0044] charring conversion: heating the reactor to 220° C., and putting a carboxylic acid containing 1% by mass of biomass into the reactor to perform solid solution charring on the biomass; and
[0045] cooling: after the charring conversion is completed, cooling the reactor to 40° C. or lower to obtain the biochar.
EXAMPLE 5
[0046] Dosing: mixing pre-crushed rice hulls or granules with a 10% transition metal salt and then putting the mixture into a reactor;
[0047] charring conversion: heating the reactor to 300° C., and putting a carboxyl containing 5% by mass of biomass into the reactor to perform solid solution charring on the biomass; and
[0048] cooling: after the charring conversion is completed, cooling the reactor to 40° C. or lower to obtain the biochar.
EXAMPLE 6
[0049] Dosing: mixing pre-crushed wood bits or granules with a 5% Y molecular sieve and then putting the mixture into a reactor;
[0050] charring conversion: heating the reactor to 350° C., and putting carbonyl containing 3% by mass of biomass into the reactor to perform solid solution charring on the biomass; and
[0051] cooling: after the charring conversion is completed, cooling the reactor to 40° C. or lower to obtain the biochar.
EXAMPLE 7
[0052] Dosing: putting pre-crushed corn stalks or granules into a reactor;
[0053] charring conversion: heating the reactor to 220° C., and putting a carboxylic acid containing 1% by mass of biomass, 2% acetic acid, 2% formaldehyde, and a calcium salt containing 1% by mass of biomass into the reactor to perform solid solution charring on the biomass; and
[0054] cooling: after the charring conversion is completed, cooling the reactor to 40° C. or lower to obtain the biochar.
[0055] Time required to catalyze the reaction by adding the catalyst at different charring temperatures is different, and the lower the temperature at which the catalyst is added, the longer the time required to catalyze the reaction. A process temperature of the charring conversion step according to the present invention is 200° C. to 800° C., and charring time thereof is 10 min to 120 min.
COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 1
[0056] Dosing: putting pre-crushed corn stalks into a reactor;
[0057] charring conversion: heating the reactor to 220° C., and putting a calcium salt containing 1% by mass of biomass into the reactor to perform charring on the biomass; and
[0058] cooling: after the charring conversion is completed, cooling the reactor to 40° C. or lower to obtain the biochar.
COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 2
[0059] Dosing: mixing pre-crushed rice hulls with a 10% transition metal salt and then putting the mixture into a reactor;
[0060] charring conversion: heating the reactor to perform charring on the biomass; and
[0061] cooling: after the charring conversion is completed, cooling the reactor to 40° C. or lower to obtain the biochar.
[0062] Experimental data of coal conversion rates of Examples 1 to 7 and Comparative Examples 1 and 2 described above were as follows:
TABLE-US-00001 Biomass Active group Catalyst Reaction Coal conversion type type type temperature rate % Comparative corn 1% calcium 220° C. 40% Example 1 stalks salt Comparative rice 10% transition 300° C. 41% Example 2 hulls metal salt Example 1 corn 1% carboxylic 1% calcium 220° C. 60% stalks acid salt Example 2 rice 5% carboxyl 10% transition 300° C. 63% hulls metal salt Example 3 wood 3% carbonyl 5% Y molecular 350° C. 62% bits sieve Example 4 corn 1% carboxylic 1% calcium 220° C. 61% stalks acid salt Example 5 rice 1% carboxylic 10% transition 300° C. 63% hulls acid metal salt Example 6 wood 3% carbonyl 5% Y molecular 350° C. 62% bits sieve Example 7 corn 1% carboxylic 1% calcium 220° C. 64% stalks acid, 2% acetic salt acid, 2% formaldehyde
[0063] It can be seen from the experimental data that by coordinating the active group-containing active agent with the catalyst, the present invention can inhibit side reactions effectively and perform solid solution charring on the biomass, thereby improving a coal conversion rate and making the charring process clean and environmentally friendly.
[0064] The above-described embodiments merely describe preferred embodiments of the present invention and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention, and various modifications and improvements of the technical solutions of the invention made by those skilled in the art all fall within the scope of the invention defined by the claims without departing from the spirit of the invention.