Recycling of Biomass Ashes


Book Description

The use of renewable bioenergy is increasing, and so is the production of associated wastes: biomass ashes. This book presents eleven chapters on the options for recycling such biomass ashes, ranging from their use as fertilizer in agriculture and forestry to their application as a supplement for the production of cement-based materials or bricks. The book also examines the pros and cons for each of the different uses of biomass ashes.




Ash from Coal and Biomass Combustion


Book Description

This is a concise book with comprehensive information on coal and biomass ash generated from their combustion in thermal power plants. It presents detailed studies on ash generated from contrasting coal and biomass feedstocks, and provides a comparative evaluation of these different ashes in terms of their origin, properties, environmental hazards. Potential utilizations with specific advantages and disadvantages of the respective ashes are elaborated in detail, including some innovative means of ash utilization for value addition purposes. By addressing both the theory and commercial exploitation of these products, this book will be helpful for industrialists, academicians and researchers alike.




Low Carbon Biomass Fuel Combustion and Ash Recycling for Sustainable Cement Production


Book Description

"Switching to low carbon fuel (LCF) can help the cement industry reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions effectively. This is because LCF generates energy that can lower the coal consumption in the kiln. Biomass fuel originating from perennial grass crops and woody materials is LCF that can be converted to clean energy (e.g. heat or steam) via combustion, which is an independent process from cement production. Meanwhile, the residual ash from the biomass combustion may be recycled by blending with cement if this ash possesses a high pozzolanic activity, which can reduce the demand for cement and accordingly lessen the CO2 emissions associated with cement production. Hence, the overall objectives of this thesis were to 1) investigate the combustion characteristics of switchgrass (Panicum vigratum L.) compared to hardwood; 2) characterize the physiochemical properties of switchgrass combustion ash, and assess the strength in mortars made from blended cement containing up to 20% switchgrass combustion ash content; 3) and optimize the combustion conditions to achieve a high energy conversion and ash pozzolanic value simultaneously.Switchgrass and hardwood contained 17.5 and 17.7 MJ·kg-1 of energy value, which was appropriate for energy generation. Using a laboratory-scale experimental platform that studied the air supply effect on combustion performance, the greatest energy conversion efficiency and combustion completeness rate were obtained with an excess air of 20% for switchgrass and 30% for hardwood (4 mm particle size). Kinetic analysis also confirmed that increasing the oxygen availability resulted in a superior energy conversion. Switchgrass ash had lower fouling and slagging tendencies than hardwood, and could be a better biomass fuel for a commercial-scale boiler.Switchgrass combusted at 411 °C generated 5% ash by mass. After grinding for 30 s, ground ash had a porous structure with 65.0 μm of mean particle size and 41.2 m2·g-1 of BET surface area. Ground ash contained 67.2% of SiO2 and its structure was 72.2% amorphous crystal. This ash was a good pozzolan in blended cement, and its pozzolanic activity was improved by adding chemical accelerators (5% Na2SO4 and 5% CaCl2·2H2O were equally effective). Blended cement with 10% ash and either 5% Na2SO4 or 5% CaCl2·2H2O had similar material strength and expansion resistance as conventional cement. Furthermore, considering the effect of switchgrass combustion temperature (350, 450, 550 or 650 °C) and retention time (1 or 4 h), the combustion conditions of 550 °C for 4 h were recommended for concurrently optimizing the ash pozzolanic activity (114%) and energy output (4.21 kJ·g-1) from switchgrass.In conclusion, it was technically feasible to offset energy demands in cement production by relying on switchgrass or hardwood combustion in parallel to coal burning. Recycling 10% of the switchgrass ash generated under optimal combustion conditions (550 °C for 4 h) in blended cement not only offset the disturbance in the cementitious composition due to ash substitution, but also contributed to greater strength microstructural compound (C-S-H) formation, thus improving the concrete strength by 14.2%. If these findings can be extrapolated directly to an average-size cement production plant (3.06 GJ coal /1000 kg cement product), the life-cycle CO2 emission would decrease by 1.77% when 5% of the coal burned is replaced by switchgrass energy with ash recycling." --













Waste Materials in Construction


Book Description

This volume presents the proceedings of the International Conference on The Science and Engineering of Recycling for Environmental Protection (WASCON 2000), of which a number of themes have been identified. All are inter-related and inter-dependent in so far as potential users of secondary, recovered or recycled material have to be assured that the material is environmentally safe and stable. It is the environmental challenge that forms a leading theme for the conference, and the themes of quality assurance and quality control support this aspect. In terms of use of 'recovered' materials, science and engineering play important and inter-dependent roles and this is reflected in themes which form the very core of the conference. Of no less importance is control of land contamination and how we propose to model for the long term impact of our aims. However dutiful and competent our ideas and studies, there has to be a measure of control and the role of legislation forms the final theme of WASCON 2000.The breadth of studies being undertaken world-wide and the innovative ideas that are expressed in papers submitted are worthy of this important subject. It is also interesting to note that papers were offered from 30 countries, a sign of the increasing awareness of the need to preserve our natural resources and utilize to the full those with which we are more familiar. This book will contribute to the understanding of and solution of environmental problems concerning the re-use of waste materials in construction.




Sustainable Construction Materials


Book Description

Sustainable Construction Materials: Municipal Incinerated Bottom Ash discusses the global use of virgin aggregates and CO2 polluter Portland cement. Given the global sustainability agenda, much of the demand for these two sets of materials can be substantially reduced through the appropriate use of waste materials, thereby conserving natural resources, energy and CO2 emissions. Realistically, this change can only be realized and sustained through engineering ingenuity and new concepts in design. Although a great deal of research has been published over the last 50 years, it remains fragmented and ineffective. This book develops a single global knowledge-base, encouraging greater use of selected waste streams. The focus of massive systematic reviews is to encourage the uptake of recycled secondary materials (RSM) by the construction industry and guide researchers to recognize what is already known regarding waste.




Municipal Solid Waste Incineration


Book Description

Ever increasing amounts of solid waste and dwindling space for disposal is a problem reaching crisis level in many of the world's largest urban areas. Incineration as an alternative to landfill has come under scrutiny, though the capital and operating costs generally exceed those associated with landfill. This report provides background information for the "Decision-maker' guide to municipal solid waste (MSW) incineration". Key criteria for a solid waste incineration scheme are identified, and the report gives decision makers information on how to investigate and assess the degree to which they are fulfilled.