The performance of decoupled temperature and pressure hydrothermal process. Credit: the authors

Hydrothermal carbonization of lignocellulosic biomass—the most abundant renewable feedstock—is a promising method for the production of carbon materials with negative carbon emissions. This method has attracted a great deal of attention over the past decade because it uses water which is inherently present in green biomass and non-toxic.

Nonetheless, like everything, hydrothermal carbonization also has its drawbacks—the requirement of high reaction and high energy consumption. To that end, researchers worldwide are actively investigating greener alternatives—a team of researchers from Tsinghua University in China may just have the answer.

The team discovered a new strategy to decouple the temperature and pressure hydrothermal process, which in turn allows the breaking of the temperature limit.

"Using this new approach, we can achieve low-temperature carbonization of lignocellulosic biomass comprising rice straw and poplar leaves at 200 °C—breaking the temperature limit of 230 °C in the conventional process," says Hui Zhou, corresponding author of the study.

The team demonstrated that the new decoupled temperature and pressure hydrothermal process could break through the protective barrier formed by the highly ordered crystalline structure of cellulose and effectively carbonize cellulose and hemicellulose, producing carbon microspheres with high calorific value, abundant oxygen-containing , a certain degree of graphitization and good thermal stability.

Cellulose is a key precursor for the formation of carbon microspheres in addition to the protective barrier of biomass structure, and biomass with high cellulose content had a higher potential for the production of well-shaped hydrochar, which can be use as a , a soil amendment or an adsorbent for removing pollutants from wastewater streams.

The team's findings are published in Green Energy & Environment.

Notably, up until now, the approach to improving for biomass conversion has been more in the development of new catalysts; however, there are very few catalysts suitable for hydrothermal carbonization of biomass.

"This new carbon-negative technology can greatly improve the advantages of hydrothermal carbonization technology," adds study lead author Shijie Yu. "We hope that our results will encourage researchers worldwide to continue their research on hydrothermal carbonization of various types of biomass to contribute to the mitigation of the current climate crisis."

More information: Shijie Yu et al, Breaking the temperature limit of hydrothermal carbonization of lignocellulosic biomass by decoupling temperature and pressure, Green Energy & Environment (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.gee.2023.01.001

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