Pyrolysis Products from Residues of Palm Oil Industry

  • Bertero M
  • García J
  • Falco M
  • et al.
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Abstract

Palm kernel shell (PKS) and empty fruit bunches, both raw (EFB-R) and pretreated by means of autoclaving (EFB-A) and microwave (EFB-M), were pyro- lyzed in a fixed-bed stainless steel reactor at 550 °C. The yield of the water-soluble liquid fraction (pyroligneous acid, PA) in the pyrolysis of PKS was 26%wt. (dry basis) and in the range of 16–46%wt. when different EFB were used. The yield of insoluble liquid fraction (bio-oil, BO) was 9.1%wt. for PKS and up to 25%wt. in the case of EFB. Liquid and gaseous products were analyzed by conventional capillary gas chromatography. The PA from the PKS had 30%wt. of total phenolic com- pounds (up to 24%wt. phenol) and 46%wt. acetic acid. On the other hand, the bio- oil from PKS had 43%wt. of total phenolic compounds (up to 26%wt. phenol) and 17%wt. acetic acid. The PA from EFB contained mainly acetic acid (65.5%wt.), furfural (7.7%wt.), methanol (8.0%wt.), and phenol (15.2%wt.). When EFB was pretreated, the concentration of acetic acid in PA decreased dramatically, while the concentration of furfural increased up to ten times, this effect being more noticeable in the case of microwave pretreatment. The yields of by-products were of signifi- cance in all cases (13–23%wt. of gases and 33–52%wt. of char). These results show that the liquid products obtained from the pyrolysis of palm oil industrial wastes could be used in order to obtain chemical raw materials of worldwide extended use, while the by-products (gases and char) can be used as renewable energy sources.

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Bertero, M., García, J. R., Falco, M., Sedran, U., Mahmud, K. N., Ariffin, S. J., … Zakaria, Z. A. (2018). Pyrolysis Products from Residues of Palm Oil Industry. In Sustainable Technologies for the Management of Agricultural Wastes (pp. 7–24). Springer Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-5062-6_2

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