Biocrude: Difference between revisions

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(Added a link to a relevant Scientific Paper)
(Added a link to a relevant Scientific Paper)
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**Quote: "Molecular weights tracked with obdurate carbohydrate content and followed the order of Spirulina < swine manure < digested sludge. A similar trend was observed in boiling point distributions and the long branched aliphatic contents. These findings show the importance of HTL feedstock composition and highlight the need for better understanding of biocrude chemistries when considering bio-oil uses and upgrading requirements."
**Quote: "Molecular weights tracked with obdurate carbohydrate content and followed the order of Spirulina < swine manure < digested sludge. A similar trend was observed in boiling point distributions and the long branched aliphatic contents. These findings show the importance of HTL feedstock composition and highlight the need for better understanding of biocrude chemistries when considering bio-oil uses and upgrading requirements."
*[https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-019-51315-5 "Sustainable production of bio-crude oil via hydrothermal liquefaction of symbiotically grown biomass of microalgae-bacteria coupled with effective wastewater treatment" ]
*[https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-019-51315-5 "Sustainable production of bio-crude oil via hydrothermal liquefaction of symbiotically grown biomass of microalgae-bacteria coupled with effective wastewater treatment" ]
** "GC-MS and FTIR analysis of bio-crude oil indicates abundance of the hydrocarbon fraction and in turn, better oil quality. Maximum distillate fraction of 30.62% lies within the boiling point range of 200–300 °C depicting suitability of the bio-crude oil for conversion into diesel oil, jet fuel and fuel for stoves."
*[https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1364032117308146 "A review on hydrothermal liquefaction of biomass" ] (And from 2018, this paper seems like the potential best one so far)
**


=Internal Links=
=Internal Links=

Revision as of 03:03, 30 November 2020

Basics

  • A viscous liquid resembling crude petrolium oil in most respects
  • Produced from biomass
  • Can be aquired from a variety of methods (see HTL )
  • Some forms of Pyrolysis Oil can be considered Bio-Crude, but their compositions are not as broad in most cases (research needed on this)

Used For

  • Burning as a fuel Itself
  • Refining it into Bio-Petrochemicals and other derivatives (Biofuels such as Bio Gasoline, Biodiesel, etc) using a Biorefinery and/or Biocrude Refinery

Catalyst Compatibility

"Raw"

Processing Methods Which Help

Composition

Internal Links

External Links