| dc.description.abstract |
Palm kernel shell (PKS), an abundant agro-industrial residue, represents a largely
underutilized biomass resource in West Africa despite its high fixed carbon content
and structural properties that make it suitable for energy applications. While PKS
has been studied for adsorbents, biofuels, and composites, its potential as a
renewable catalyst in thermochemical hydrogen production remains
underexplored. This study aimed to develop PKS-derived biochar and activated
carbon as sustainable and cost-effective catalytic precursors for biomass
gasification. The methodology adopted a two-stage approach: first, Box–Behnken
Design (BBD) under Response Surface Methodology (RSM) was employed to
optimize pyrolysis parameters (temperature, heating rate, and residence time) for
biochar production. Then, the optimum biochar underwent steam activation under
controlled conditions to enhance microporosity and catalytic properties. Proximate,
elemental, physicochemical, and structural analyses were performed, including
determination of fixed carbon, volatile matter, density, ash content, and iodine
number. Results revealed that pyrolysis at 500 °C and 15 °C/min with a residence
time of 60 min produced the optimum biochar (PKS-OP1) with high fixed carbon
(77.1 wt%) and moderate porosity (iodine number: 155 mg/g). Subsequent steam
activation transformed this biochar into a highly microporous activated carbon
(PKS-Akt 280) with enhanced properties: iodine number of 885 mg/g, low volatile
matter (~4 wt%), high fixed carbon (90 wt%), and pH ~10, demonstrating superior
porosity, surface area, and thermal stability. Comparative analysis showed PKSAkt 280 matches or outperforms some conventional catalysts, positioning it as a
viable catalyst precursor. The study concludes that PKS-derived activated carbon
offers an efficient, low-cost, and sustainable alternative to traditional metal-based
catalysts for hydrogen production via gasification. It is recommended that further
pilot-scale testing and industrial-scale process development be investigated to
integrate PKS-biochar as a renewable catalyst pathway, contributing to waste
valorization, cleaner hydrogen production, and the circular bioeconomy in palmgrowing regions. |
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