Understanding the effect of heating rate on hydrothermal liquefaction: A comprehensive investigation from model compounds to a real food waste

[Display omitted] •Different heating rates were tested in HTL of model compounds and real food waste.•Heating rate strongly affected HTL performances at lower residence times.•Heating rate influence at longer residence times was limited.•HTL performance was well described by the kinetic severity fac...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bioresource technology 2024-03, Vol.396, p.130446-130446, Article 130446
Hauptverfasser: Tito, Edoardo, Marcolongo, Carlo Alberto, Pipitone, Giuseppe, Monteverde, Alessandro H.A., Bensaid, Samir, Pirone, Raffaele
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Different heating rates were tested in HTL of model compounds and real food waste.•Heating rate strongly affected HTL performances at lower residence times.•Heating rate influence at longer residence times was limited.•HTL performance was well described by the kinetic severity factor. Hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL) emerges as an efficient technology for converting food waste into biocrude. Among HTL parameters, the impact of heating rate is understudied. This study systematically explores its variation (5–115 K/min) on HTL performance using actual food waste and model compounds representing its constituents. Results revealed that an increase in heating rates significantly impacts HTL performances (+63 % biocrude and −34 % solid with food waste) with short residence times, as slower heating rates imply a longer overall time and a higher kinetic advancement of the reaction. Conversely, with longer residence times, the influence of heating rates becomes negligible, as kinetics during heating times are overshadowed by those at operating temperatures. A subtle effect of heating variation at extended residence time was observed only with carbohydrates. This research emphasizes the utility of a kinetic severity factor (KSF) as a valuable tool for simultaneously considering heating rates, operating times, and temperatures.
ISSN:0960-8524
1873-2976
DOI:10.1016/j.biortech.2024.130446