Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Co-combustion of NH (ammonia) and hydrochar is a promising strategy to reduce fossil fuel usage and CO emissions. In this study, reactive molecular dynamics simulations (ReaxFF MD) were performed to investigate the effects of oxygen equivalence ratio (λ), ammonia co-combustion ratio, and combustion atmosphere on the combustion characteristics of the NH/hydrochar mixture. Firstly, Increasing the oxygen equivalence ratio from 0.5 to 1.5 accelerated the reaction and enhanced fuel conversion: the total molecule count rose by ∼56 % (from 2449 to 3810), and heavy coke species (C40 compounds) were completely eliminated at λ ≥ 1.0. A higher λ facilitated the conversion of H into HO and N into NO/NO, increasing HO, NO, and NO yields while suppressing H and N. At λ = 0.5, no CO or NO formed; at λ = 1.5, small amounts appeared, with CO produced being several-fold more abundant than CO. Correspondingly, the peak NH intermediate count increased from 181 to 233 as λ rose from 0.5 to 1.5, whereas NH intermediates (NH, NH, NH) declined - an oxygen-driven shift favoring NO formation over N. Secondly, increasing the ammonia co-combustion ratio from 62.5 % to 85 % led to higher final yields of CO, NO, and N, with a corresponding drop in residual unconverted carbon (UC). A greater NH proportion promoted the conversion of hydrochar into small molecules (C-C gases), thereby reducing tar and coke formation (fewer tar/coke species at 85 % NH than at 62.5 %). Mechanistic analysis showed that a hydrochar fragment (CHO) can be stepwise broken down by NH-derived radicals (e.g. NH, OH, H) into intermediate species such as CHO and CHO, ultimately producing CO. Finally, the combustion atmosphere had a notable impact on reaction heat release. Under both air (O/N) and pure O conditions, the co-combustion process began with an endothermic phase followed by exothermic heat release. The peak heat absorption at λ = 1.0 reached 69.18 Ha under pure O, much higher than the 16.78 Ha under air, indicating a more intense initial reaction in an oxygen-rich environment. By the end of 500 ps, however, the net energy released in air (20.62 Ha) slightly exceeded that in pure O (14.10 Ha). These results demonstrate that pure oxygen accelerates fuel consumption and product formation, whereas air yields a greater overall energy release - providing quantitative insight for optimizing practical NH-hydrochar co-combustion.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2025.126635DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

oxygen equivalence
12
equivalence ratio
12
ammonia co-combustion
12
co-combustion ratio
12
combustion characteristics
8
ratio ammonia
8
ratio combustion
8
combustion atmosphere
8
heat release
8
ratio
6

Similar Publications

Purpose: To assess the association between skeletal-muscle endurance performance and mitochondrial oxidative capacity of the hamstrings as respectively measured by biomechanical and physiological standards.

Methods: Nineteen (12 men and 7 women) healthy, young, recreationally active participants enrolled in our study. Participant characteristics comprised a mean and SD age of 21.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: This study investigates the mechanisms behind exercise capacity in adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), focusing on central and peripheral components, as described by the Fick equation.

Methods: A cross-sectional study of 141 adults with T2DM was conducted, using cardiopulmonary exercise testing, near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) and exercise echocardiography. Participants with sufficient-quality NIRS data were stratified into tertiles based on percentage predicted VO₂peak.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Traditional electrochemical redox assessments offer insights into material properties for charge storage and catalytic kinetics but often fail to link these to specific surfaces, obscuring the structure-performance relationship. Here, we reveal the facet-dependent electrochemical redox behaviors and their connection to oxygen evolution reaction (OER) catalysis using Co(OH) nanosheets and nanorods as models. By correlating redox charge storage capacity and kinetics with distinct exposed surfaces, we uncover diffusion-controlled redox processes on the basal surface and non-diffusion-controlled behavior on the lateral surface and further utilize the distinct redox charging kinetics to differentiate the two.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Nitrogen (N) fixation with non-thermal plasmas has been proposed as a sustainable alternative to meet growing N fertilizer demands for agriculture. This technology generates Plasma Activated Water (PAW) with a range of chemical compositions, including different concentrations of nitrate (NO₃⁻) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), among other compounds. Potential use of PAW as an effective crop fertilizer necessitates a robust understanding of the underlying biology of the plant, which is not yet available.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

When pathogenic bacteria colonize a wound, they can create an alkaline ecological niche that selects for their survival by creating an inflammatory environment restricting healthy wound healing to proceed. To aid healing, wound acidification has been exploited to disrupt this process and stimulate fibroblast growth, increase wound oxygen concentrations, minimize proteolytic activity, and restimulate the host immune system. Within this study, we have developed cobalt-doped carbon quantum dot nanoparticles that work together with mild acetic acid, creating a potent synergistic antimicrobial therapy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF