Title of article
Water uptake in biochars: The roles of porosity and hydrophobicity
Author/Authors
Gray، نويسنده , , Myles and Johnson، نويسنده , , Mark G. and Dragila، نويسنده , , Maria I. and Kleber، نويسنده , , Markus، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
10
From page
196
To page
205
Abstract
We assessed the effects of porosity and hydrophobicity on water uptake by biochars. Biochars were produced from two feedstocks (hazelnut shells and Douglas fir chips) at three production temperatures (370 °C, 500 °C, and 620 °C). To distinguish the effects of porosity from the effects of hydrophobicity, we compared uptake of water to uptake of ethanol (which is completely wetting and not affected by hydrophobic materials). For both feedstocks, low temperature biochars took up less water than high temperature biochars but the same amount of ethanol, suggesting that differences in water uptake based on production temperature reflect differences in surface hydrophobicity, not porosity. Conversely, Douglas fir biochars took up more water than hazelnut shell biochars due to greater porosity. Thus, designing biochars for water holding applications requires two considerations: (a) creating sufficient porosity through feedstock selection, and (b) determining a production temperature that reduces hydrophobicity to an acceptable level.
Keywords
Biochar , water uptake , porosity , Hydrophobicity , FTIR
Journal title
Biomass and Bioenergy
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Biomass and Bioenergy
Record number
1919122
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