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research article

Banana split: biomass splitting with flash light irradiation

Silva, Wanderson O.  
•
Nagar, Bhawna  
•
Soutrenon, Mathieu
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January 25, 2022
Chemical Science

Biomass splitting into gases and solids using flash light irradiation is introduced as an efficient photo-thermal process to photo-pyrolyze dried natural biomass powders to valuable syngas and conductive porous carbon (biochar). The photo-thermal reactions are carried out in a few milliseconds (14.5 ms) by using a high-power Xenon flash lamp. Here, dried banana peel is used as a model system and each kg of dried biomass generates ca. 100 L of hydrogen and 330 g of biochar. Carbon monoxide and some light hydrocarbons are also generated providing a further increase in the high heating value (HHV) with an energy balance output of 4.09 MJ per kg of dried biomass. Therefore, biomass photo-pyrolysis by flash light irradiation is proposed as a new approach not only to convert natural biomass wastes into energy, such as hydrogen, but also for carbon mitigation, which can be stored or used as biochar.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1039/d1sc06322g
Web of Science ID

WOS:000746569500001

Author(s)
Silva, Wanderson O.  
Nagar, Bhawna  
Soutrenon, Mathieu
Girault, Hubert H.  
Date Issued

2022-01-25

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY

Published in
Chemical Science
Volume

13

Issue

6

Start page

1774

End page

1779

Subjects

Chemistry, Multidisciplinary

•

Chemistry

•

pyrolysis

•

ink

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LEPA  
Available on Infoscience
January 31, 2022
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/184896
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