Giant kilns would take agricultural waste and dead trees and, using a process
called pyrolysis, burn them without using oxygen.
This process,
called pyrolysis, also produces syngas and bio-oil that can be used as a renewable fuel.
This is done through a process
called pyrolysis, which when creating the charcoal locks in about 60 per cent of the biomass's carbon.
Minzae Lee and team subjected the filters to a high - temperature process
called pyrolysis, transforming the organic materials inside them into a porous carbon substance.
The plant flecks fly through the tube where ordinary sand heated to 500 degrees Celsius flashes them to an oil vapor in less than 800 milliseconds in a process
called pyrolysis.
Not exact matches
A third route, known as
pyrolysis, heats dried and ground biomass to about 550 ˚C in an oxygen - depleted chamber (so the biomass doesn't burn), producing a mixture of gases, liquids, and a gray, carbon - rich solid
called coke.
The conversion of the
pyrolysis oil to a renewable transportation fuel is made through a process
called gasification.
The new technique,
called ramped
pyrolysis / oxidation (ramped PyrOx or RPO), takes advantage of the way different kinds of organic matter react to heat.
Again I
call attention to moving forward on a number of crises by using
pyrolysis on organic wastes.
For example, BEST Energy in Australia, have developed a slow
pyrolysis approach
called Argichar, in which between 25 and 70 % by weight of the dry feed material is converted to a high - carbon char material, while also generating syngas: see www.ecovoice.com.au/enews/enews-47/Images%2047/Brief%20BEST%20
pyrolysis%20and%20Agrichar%202007.pdf.
Burning is
called Transformation, which «refers to incineration,
pyrolysis, distillation, or biological conversion other than composting.»