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Wood processing for energy use
Author(s) -
Luiz Antônio Marafon Bacca,
Eduardo Gelinsky,
Matheus de Paula Gonçalves,
Adriana Ferla de Oliveira
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
engenharia na agricultura
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2175-6813
pISSN - 1414-3984
DOI - 10.13083/reveng.v29i1.12700
Subject(s) - briquette , biomass (ecology) , pellets , charcoal , environmental science , pulp and paper industry , woodworking , agricultural engineering , process engineering , torrefaction , computer science , database , pyrolysis , waste management , engineering , materials science , mechanical engineering , agronomy , biology , composite material , coal , metallurgy
Forest biomass has been used as an energy source since ancient times. Since then, several ways of using them have emerged, along with technologies to improve their energy quality. One can cite genetic improvement, thermal transformation through pyrolysis for charcoal and torrefied biomass production, and mechanical transformation through compaction, to produce pellets and briquettes and chipping for the production of chips. However, it is somehow difficult to find articles on these topics that are clearly and objectively presented, making it difficult to read them. The objective of this work was to search data on the ways of processing forest biomass and solutions for the better use of this biomass and its energy use. Therefore, Google Scholar was used as a database from which articles already recognized and others with less impact were obtained. The following search words were used: Eucalyptus, Pinus, wood chips, pellets, briquettes, charcoal, and torrefied wood. To filter the results obtained, the articles that appeared as the most relevant were selected first, then filtered for articles with less than five years from publication, and those at less than two years of publication. Next, the selected articles went through a verification of the data contained in them, and the necessary information was removed from each, which were the species, immediate analysis, extractives, HCV, etc. These data were organized in tables according to the type of processing, prioritizing the values of greatest interest in each analysis, along with the appropriate references. It was observed from the data obtained that the results are compatible among different researchers in their analyses. For samples processed without thermal treatment, the initial characteristics of the wood are maintained, and when going through pyrolysis or torrefaction, these characteristics are changed.

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