Thermochemical biofuel production in hydrothermal media: A review of sub- and supercritical water technologies
Paul Scherrer Institute · Massachusetts Institute of Technology · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Hydrothermal technologies are broadly defined as chemical and physical transformations in high-temperature (200–600 °C), high-pressure (5–40 MPa) liquid or supercritical water. This thermochemical means of reforming biomass may have energetic advantages, since, when water is heated at high pressures a phase change to steam is avoided which avoids large enthalpic energy penalties. Biological chemicals undergo a range of reactions, including dehydration and decarboxylation reactions, which are influenced by the temperature, pressure, concentration, and presence of homogeneous or heterogeneous catalysts. Several biomass hydrothermal conversion processes are in development or demonstration. Liquefaction processes…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 33.51
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 253
Authors
6Topics & keywords
- Supercritical fluid
- Hydrothermal circulation
- Hydrothermal liquefaction
- Liquefaction
- Biomass (ecology)
- Pyrolysis
- Chemical engineering
- Chemistry
- Clean water and sanitation