palm fruit bunch pellet oil production line in kenya
- Product Using: Producing Palm Oil
- Type: Palm Oil Production Line
- Main Machinery: Palm Oil Production Line Machine
- Dimension(L*W*H): 1800MM*15300MM*1950MM
- Weight: 200KG-800KG
- Voltage: 380V/220v, 220V/380V
- After Warranty Service: Video technical support, Online support, Spare parts, Field maintenance and repair service
- Local Service Location: Brazil, India, Japan, Malaysia, Argentina, South Korea, UAE, Algeria, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Ukraine, Kyrgyzstan, Nigeria
- Warranty: 1 Year
- After-sales Service Provided: Field installation, commissioning and training, Engineers available to service machinery overseas
- Application fields: Palm oil factory, Beverage Factory, Meat processing plants, Bakery, cassava garri processing line
- Raw material: Palm, Palm Kernel
- Application: Food Industry
- Function: Cleaning
- Material: Stainless Steel
- Capacity: 200-300kg/h
- Power: 1.5kw, 2.2kw-35kw
- Color: Gray
- Output product name: cassava garri processing line
- Certification: CE & ISO9001 2015
- Project Location: kenya
Review of the fuel properties, characterisation techniques, and pre
The valorisation of oil palm empty fruit bunches (OPEFB) in the palm oil industry is hampered by major challenges due to its poor fuel properties, which require comprehensive characterisation and pre-treatment. This paper presents an overview of the various technologies currently employed for the fuel characterisation and pre-treatment of OPEFB in the literature. Furthermore, the paper
Empty fruit bunch (EFB) is one of the abundant biomass waste from oil palm and it is an issue that it can be used as renewable energy in the form of Bio-oil. Bio-oil is produced by a thermal
An overview of empty fruit bunch from oil palm as feedstock for bio-oil
1. Introduction. Originated from West Africa, oil palm (Elaeis guineensis) is currently one of the leading perennial oleaginous food crops grown widely in many tropical regions of Southeast Asia with abundant rainfall (1600–2000 mm y 1) and sunlight (5–7 h day 1), particularly in Malaysia and Indonesia, mainly for the production of edible cooking oil [1].
Am J Appl Sci 2011;8(10):984e8. [25] Ruengvilairat P, Tanatavikorn H, Vitidsant T. Bio-oil production by pyrolysis of oil palm empty fruit bunch in nitrogen and steam atmospheres. J Sustain Bioenergy Syst 2012;2(4):75e85. [26] Abdullah N, Sulaiman F, Gerhauser H. Characterisation of oil palm empty fruit bunches for fuel application.
Torrefaction of oil palm empty fruit bunch pellets: product yield
In this study, the non-oxidative torrefaction of oil palm empty fruit bunch (OPEFB) pellets was investigated from 250 to 300 °C for 30 min in a horizontal fixed bed tubular reactor. The effects of the selected conditions on the yields, distributions and fuel characteristics of the torrefaction products were examined. The mass or solid yield (MY) decreased from 68.1 to 36.2%, whereas the
In searching for lignocellulosic-based alternative pellets, quality is key, ash in particular, for market acceptance and penetration. One such feedstock of growing importance, pressed empty fruit bunches (EFB) fibres, was exploited in this study via 3 different physical pretreatment methods (Tests 1–3) prior to pre-pelletising in an industrial-scale plant for improving the ash content. The
Integrated Biorefinery of Empty Fruit Bunch from Palm Oil Industries
Empty fruit bunch (EFB) utilization to produce valuable bio-chemicals is seen as an economical and sustainable alternative to waste management in palm oil industries. This work proposed an integrated biorefinery configuration of EFB valorization considering sustainability pillars—namely, economic, environmental, and safety criteria. Techno-economic analysis, life cycle assessment, and hazard
EFB is a bulky and voluminous brown bunch left over at palm oil mills after the removal of sterilized fruit by a rotary thresher drum. It is irregular in shape, weighs about 3.5 kg and has a thickness of 130 mm [20], and can vary from 170 to 300 mm long and 250–350 mm wide [11]. The biological growth of fruit bunches, coupled with the
Torréfaction to improve biomass pellet made of oil palm empty fruit bunch
Abstract and Figures. This study aims at determining the effect of the torrefaction process on the fuel quality of biomass pellets made from oil palm empty fruit bunches (EFB). The torrefaction
This study was an attempt to produce bio-oil from empty fruit bunches (EFB) of oil palm waste using fast pyrolysis technology. A 150 g/h fluidised bed bench scale fast pyrolysis unit operating at atmospheric pressure was used to obtain the pyrolysis liquid. A comparison of the elemental composition of unwashed and washed feedstock was made in this study. With the five methods of treatment
- Can empty fruit bunch be used as a feedstock for bio-oil production?
- Empty fruit bunch (EFB) from oil palm is one of the potential biomass to produce biofuels like bio-oil due to its abundant supply and favorable physicochemical characteristics. Confirming the assertion, this paper presents an overview of EFB as a feedstock for bio-oil production.
- Is oil palm empty fruit bunch a biomass resource?
- Surprisingly, few writers have been able to draw on the feedstock significance for oil palm empty fruit bunch (EFB) as the biomass resource for biofuels compared to the other types of biomass waste. Therefore, this paper presents a comprehensive review of EFB as a biomass resource presented in four major parts.
- Can oil palm-based biomass pellets be used for densification?
- Fuel quality is among the major issues encountered for commercial production and utilisation of oil palm-based biomass pellets from empty fruit bunches (EFB). In this study, a physical treatment, namely sieving and water washing, was applied to EFB prior to densification using an industrial-scale plant.
- How does the palm oil industry generate biomass?
- The palm oil industry generates an abundance of oil palm biomass such as the mesocarp fibre, shell, empty fruit bunch (EFB), frond, trunk and palm oil mill effluent (POME). For 80 million tonnes of fresh fruit bunch (FFB) processed last year, the amount of oil palm biomass was more than 25 million tones.