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Processed Biomass Pellets From Organic-Carbon-Containing Feedstock

a technology of organic carbon and biomass pellets, which is applied in the direction of biofuels, fuels, waste based fuels, etc., can solve the problems of natural gas, coal, and increasing the cost of fuel obtained from crude oil, so as to reduce the adverse corrosion of wear and maintenance cleaning, high energy density, and low water content

Inactive Publication Date: 2017-05-04
CTP BIOTECH LLC
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  • Summary
  • Abstract
  • Description
  • Claims
  • Application Information

AI Technical Summary

Benefits of technology

The invention is a processed biomass pellet that can be used as a cleaner coal substitute in devices that use coal to generate heat. The low salt content of the pellets reduces corrosive wear and maintenance cleaning of the devices. The low water content and high energy density of the raw biomass feedstock allow for a wide range of renewable organic-carbon-containing feedstock to be used in the pelletization process in a cost-effective way. The process also reduces energy requirements and the cost per weight of the feedstock by at least 60% compared to conventional processes. The overall energy efficiency of the process is 40% compared to unprocessed biomass pellets.

Problems solved by technology

As the earth's crude oil supplies become more difficult and expensive to collect and there are growing concerns about the environmental effects of coal other than clean anthracite coal, the world-wide demand for energy is simultaneously growing.
Over the next ten years, depletion of the remaining world's easily accessible crude oil reserves, natural gas reserves, and low-sulfur bituminous coal reserves will lead to a significant increase in cost for fuel obtained from crude oil, natural gas, and coal.
However, this feedstock typically contains too much water and contaminants such as water-soluble salts to make it an economical alternative to common sources of fuel such as coal, petroleum, or natural gas.
And, even if the plants were sun or kiln-dried, the natural and man-made chemicals and water-soluble salts that remain in the plant cells combine to create corrosion and disruptive glazes in furnaces.
Also, the remaining moisture lowers the heat-producing million British thermal units per ton (MMBTU per ton) energy density of the feedstock thus limiting a furnace's efficiency.
Thus, municipal waste facilities that process organic-carbon-containing feedstock, a broader class of feedstock that includes materials that contain plant cells, generally operate in an energy deficient manner that costs municipalities money.
Similarly, the energy needed to process agricultural waste, also included under the general term of organic-carbon-containing feedstock, for the waste to be an effective substitute for coal or petroleum are not commercial without some sort of governmental subsidies and generally contain unsatisfactory levels of either or both water or water-soluble salts.
The cost to suitably transport and / or prepare such feedstock in a large enough volume to be commercially successful is expensive and currently uneconomical.
Also, the suitable plant-cell-containing feedstock that is available in sufficient volume to be commercially useful generally has water-soluble salt contents that result in adverse fouling and contamination scenarios with conventional processes.
Attempts have been made to prepare organic-carbon-containing feedstock as a solid renewable fuel, coal substitute, or binders for the making of coal aggregates from coal fines, but these have not been economically viable as they generally contain water-soluble salts that can contribute to corrosion, fouling, and slagging in combustion equipment, and have high water content that reduces the energy density to well below that of coal in large part because of the retained moisture.

Method used

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  • Processed Biomass Pellets From Organic-Carbon-Containing Feedstock

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Embodiment Construction

[0031]The processed biomass pellets of the invention is a renewable solid fuel made from passing beneficiated processed organic-carbon-containing feedstock through a pelletizing system. The processed biomass pellets are similar to sub-bituminous coal in energy density. The processed biomass pellets of the invention have the advantages of coming from a renewable source, i.e., agricultural and plant materials, without the burdens of current biomass processes that are inefficient and remove less if any of the salt found in unprocessed renewable biomass. There are several aspects of the invention that will be discussed: processed biomass pellets, unprocessed renewable organic-carbon-containing feedstock, beneficiation sub-system, pelletizing sub-system, beneficiation sub-system process, and pelletizing sub-system process.

Processed Biomass Pellets

[0032]Biomass pellets made from renewable organic-carbon-containing feedstock is referred to as processed biomass pellets in this document. The...

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Abstract

A renewable processed biomass pellet composition made with a pelletizing sub-system from a processed organic-carbon-containing feedstock made with a beneficiation sub-system is described. Renewable biomass feedstock passed through a beneficiation sub-system to reduce water content to below at least 20 wt % and water-soluble intracellular salt reduction of at least 60% from that of unprocessed organic-carbon-containing feedstock on a dry basis. The processed feedstock is introduced into a pelletizing sub-system to result in renewable processed biomass pellets having an energy density of at least 17 MMBTU / ton (20 GJ / MT) a water content of less than 20 wt %, and water-soluble intracellular salt content that is decreased by at least 60 wt % on a dry basis for the processed organic-carbon-containing feedstock from that of the unprocessed organic-carbon-containing feedstock, and made with 40% less energy than expended to make current biomass pellets.

Description

RELATED APPLICATIONS[0001]This application is a divisional application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14 / 623,430, filed Feb. 16, 2015, currently allowed, and now published as U.S. Pat. Publ. No. 2015 / 0361367 A1, which is a continuation-in-part of patent application Ser. No. 14 / 305,143, filed Jun. 16, 2014, currently pending, and now published as U.S. Pat. Publ. No. 2016 / 0097157 A1, both of which are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety.FIELD OF THE INVENTION[0002]The present invention relates generally to the production of solid biomass fuel from an organic-carbon-containing feedstock.BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION[0003]The vast majority of fuels are distilled from crude oil or obtained from natural gas pumped from limited underground reserves, or mined from coal. As the earth's crude oil supplies become more difficult and expensive to collect and there are growing concerns about the environmental effects of coal other than clean anthracite coal, the world-wide deman...

Claims

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Application Information

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Patent Type & Authority Applications(United States)
IPC IPC(8): C10L5/44C10L5/08
CPCC10L5/44C10L5/442C10L5/08C10L2290/06C10L2290/30C10L2290/08C10L2200/0469C10L2290/545C10L5/445C10L2290/28Y02E50/30Y02E50/10C10L9/08C10L9/086C10L5/363C10L2290/46C10L5/42
Inventor TAIT, CARLETON DREWVAN THORRE, DOUGLAS M.CATTO, MICHAEL L.SCALZO, PHILIP JAMES
Owner CTP BIOTECH LLC
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