April 20, 2024
Journal Article

Disposition of Solids from Hydrothermal Liquefaction of Biomass: Current understanding, research gaps, and opportunities

Abstract

Characteristics of solid residuals generated during hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL) of biomass are reported to establish disposition options for these residuals to reduce liability or barriers to commercialization of HTL. HTL solids from pilot scale are reported and compared to existing HTL solids literature for a variety of biomass feedstocks and HTL configurations, noting differences among literature HTL solids due to solids collection methods. Reported analyses include CHNOS, moisture, ash, inorganics by Inductively Coupled Plasma (ICP), and High Heating Value (HHV). HTL solids are determined to be substantially compatible with U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) disposal regulations within existing data. Disposition and valorization routes are identified, yet combustion as valorization is determined to be not economically beneficial. Research gaps are identified, which include the need for future research to be performed on HTL solids that are representative of a continuous, commercializable flowsheet; verification that specific HTL solids meet EPA disposal requirements; exploration of valorization options; and the need for invention of continuous HTL solids separations/management.

Published: April 20, 2024

Citation

Middleton-Smith L.A., A.H. Zacher, S. Blackwell, J. Benemann, and T.J. Lundquist. 2023. Disposition of Solids from Hydrothermal Liquefaction of Biomass: Current understanding, research gaps, and opportunities. Energy and Fuels 37, no. 22:17301–17309. PNNL-SA-190240. doi:10.1021/acs.energyfuels.3c01828

Research topics