2020
DOI: 10.1007/s42773-020-00048-0
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Biochar characterization of invasive Pennisetum purpureum grass: effect of pyrolysis temperature

Abstract: Pennisetum purpureum is one of the most invasive perennial grasses of the Poaceae family, which are abundant in southeast Asia including Brunei Darussalam. The pyrolysis process at a slow heating rate proved to be highly promising for biochar production. The production and characterization of different Pennisetum purpureum biochars have been investigated at the pyrolysis temperatures of 400 °C, 500 °C and 600 °C with a heating and nitrogen flow rate of 5 °C/min and 0.5 L/min, respectively. The observed higher … Show more

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Cited by 69 publications
(40 citation statements)
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References 108 publications
(140 reference statements)
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“…Although it has been shown that larger charcoal particles originate generally within a few hundred metres of a lake archive (Clark et al, 1998;Higuera et al, 2007;Ohlson and Tryterud, 2000), they have also been observed to travel further depending on vegetation and fire conditions (Peters and Higuera, 2007;Pisaric, 2002;Tinner et al, 2006;Woodward and Haines, 2020). As wildfires in the Siberian boreal forest are predominantly considered low-intensity surface fires (de Groot et al, 2013;Rogers et al, 2015), the potential of the resulting convection to transport large charcoal particles is probably limited compared to high-intensity crown fires. We therefore assume a charcoal source area between a few hundred metres directly around the lake for low-intensity fires (Conedera et al, 2009) and increasing distance of up to several kilometres for more intense fires producing stronger convection, resulting in a total source area estimate of up to ca.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Although it has been shown that larger charcoal particles originate generally within a few hundred metres of a lake archive (Clark et al, 1998;Higuera et al, 2007;Ohlson and Tryterud, 2000), they have also been observed to travel further depending on vegetation and fire conditions (Peters and Higuera, 2007;Pisaric, 2002;Tinner et al, 2006;Woodward and Haines, 2020). As wildfires in the Siberian boreal forest are predominantly considered low-intensity surface fires (de Groot et al, 2013;Rogers et al, 2015), the potential of the resulting convection to transport large charcoal particles is probably limited compared to high-intensity crown fires. We therefore assume a charcoal source area between a few hundred metres directly around the lake for low-intensity fires (Conedera et al, 2009) and increasing distance of up to several kilometres for more intense fires producing stronger convection, resulting in a total source area estimate of up to ca.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Aakala et al, 2018;Feurdean et al, 2017;Molinari et al, 2020;Wallenius, 2011). However, comparisons across boreal study sites are complicated by the differing predominant fire regimes in North America (high-intensity crown fires) and Eurasia (lower-intensity surface fires) (de Groot et al, 2013;Rogers et al, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The carbonaceous materials are prepared by eliminating the volatile matters through thermal decomposition in this stage. Temperature, heating rate, gas flow rate, and the residence period are the main parameters [17]. As biochars show lower adsorption capability, an activation procedure is important to develop the pore volume and the surface areas.…”
Section: Preparation Of Acmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) offers relatively very high competence among all the types of fuel cells, fuel flexibility (hydrogen, natural gas, biogas from biomass [28][29][30][31][32], and gases made from coal), and low emissions, which led to the use of SOFCs as future power generation technology [33,34]. It shows high efficiency (>60% efficiency) with clean environment credentials [35].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%