Converting biomass waste to Energy and creating biochar, syn gas, biofuel, and electricity
iNBIO
Fast-Pyrolysis Specs

Fast-Pyrolysis Specs

Throughput Conversion to Bio-Oil & Biochar

International BioRefineries (iNBIO) designs and deploys fast pyrolysis systems that convert lignocellulosic and agricultural residues into bio-oil, biochar, and process gas in a compact, modular footprint. This page summarizes typical engineering ranges and options. Final, project-specific specifications are provided on request under NDA.


Key Performance Summary (Typical Ranges)

ParameterTypical RangeNotes
Nominal throughput (per line)5–75 metric tons/dayMultiple lines scale to 200+ TPD
Reactor temperature450–550 °COptimized by feedstock
Vapor residence time< 2 secondsFast-pyrolysis regime
Heating rate≥ 200–1,000 °C/sReactor-specific
Operating pressure~ Atmospheric (slightly negative)Induced-draft control
Bio-oil yield (wt % dry feed)40–70%Depends on feed & moisture
Biochar yield (wt %)15–40%Tunable via conditions
Process gas (wt %)7–20%Recycled for heat after startup
Feed moisture (as-received)≤ 10–15% (after drying)Integrated dryer option
Feed particle size≤ 10–30 mmScreening recommended
Electrical load (per 5–10 TPD module)75–150 kWVaries with auxiliaries
Thermal load for startupLow (LPG/NG/bio-oil)Then switches to self-heat
Typical footprint (per 5–10 TPD module)3,500–6,000 ft²Indoor or covered pad

Disclaimer: Values above are representative for fast pyrolysis. iNBIO supplies guaranteed figures in final engineering documents based on your feedstock, uptime target, and product specs.

Process Overview

  1. Feed Preparation: Size reduction, drying to target moisture, metered feeding.
  2. Thermal Deconstruction: Rapid heating in an oxygen-limited reactor; volatiles form condensable vapor, solids form biochar.
  3. Vapor Handling & Condensation: Multistage quench/condensation yields bio-oil; non-condensable gas returns to the heater.
  4. Product Recovery: Biochar is cooled and discharged; bio-oil is filtered and stored; process gas supports thermal demand.

Feedstock Compatibility

  • Woody biomass: forestry residues, sawmill fines, urban wood waste (painted/treated wood excluded unless pre-treated).
  • Ag residues: corn stover, rice husk, nut shells, cane bagasse, switch grass, poultry litter, cow manure, animal waste
  • Spec limits (typical): Moisture ≤ 15% post-drying; Ash ≤ 10% (lower preferred); Alkali index managed via feed blending or additives.

Tip: For best oil yield and stability, target low ash, low alkali feed. iNBIO can run lab screening on your samples.


Product Specifications & Options

Bio-Oil (Pyrolysis Oil)

  • Appearance: Dark, oxygenated liquid; HHV ~14–19 MJ/kg (typical).
  • Uses: Industrial heat, CHP, refinery co-processing trials, asphalt binder extender, marine fuel, train fuel, and as an intermediate for SAF after hydrotreating/hydro-deoxygenation in third-party units.
  • Options: In-line solids filtration, water content tuning, nitrogen blanketing, heated storage.

Biochar

  • Properties: Fixed carbon-rich solid; tunable surface area; low PAH process control.
  • Applications: Soil amendment, carbon removal credits, storm-water media, filtration, cement/concrete admixture.
  • Quality assurance: ASTM/ISO/IBI/EBC testing supported; certification pursued per customer strategy (iNBIO does not claim blanket certification).

Process Gas

  • Composition: CO, H₂, light hydrocarbons, CO₂ (no external oxygen).
  • Use: Recycled to provide process heat post-startup; excess can support dryers or be flared per permit conditions.

Controls, Safety & Compliance

  • Automation: PLC/SCADA with recipe control, trending, and remote monitoring; interlocks for temperature, draft, and oxygen.
  • Safety: Inerting/N₂ purge, explosion venting where applicable, hot-surface guarding, NFPA-aligned design practices; PSM applicability reviewed per site inventory.
  • Environmental: Designed to meet local air permits with cyclones, hot-gas filtration, and oxidation/thermal treatment on vents as required.

Utilities & Site Requirements

  • Power: 480 V three-phase (typical in North America) or per region.
  • Heat: Small startup fuel (LPG/NG or bio-oil); after light-off, process gas sustains heat.
  • Water: Minimal for closed-loop cooling; dry coolers available; no process wastewater from reactor.
  • Footprint: Skid-based modules for fast installation; indoor or covered outdoor layouts supported.
  • Staffing: 1–2 operators/shift per line (typical), plus maintenance/QA shared across lines.

Modularity & Scale-Up

  • Module sizes: ~5–10 TPD, ~25–40 TPD, and ~50–75 TPD per line.
  • Parallel trains: Combine lines to reach 200+ TPD with shared prep, condensation, storage, and utilities.
  • Uptime targets: Engineering offered for 7,000+ hours/year depending on feed logistics and maintenance windows.

Data Services & Guarantees

  • Front-End Testing: Lab/bench screening of your feed to predict oil/char yields and ash behavior.
  • Performance Guarantees: Offered at contract stage with agreed feed envelope and operating window.
  • Commissioning Support: On-site startup, operator training, SOPs, and spare-parts package.

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes fast pyrolysis “fast”?
Extremely short vapor residence time (< 2 s) and high heating rates keep vapors from cracking to gas, maximizing liquid yield.

Can iNBIO support SAF pathways?
Yes. iNBIO supplies stabilized bio-oil as a renewable intermediate to be used as Asphalt binder, Marine fuel, or Train fuel. SAF production requires third-party hydrotreating and upgrading; we collaborate with technology partners and refineries to qualify feed specs.

How do we handle high-ash feedstocks like poultry litter?
Expect lower liquid yields; biochar quality can be attractive for nutrient management value chains.

What certifications can biochar carry?
We support testing to IBI/EBC/ASTM protocols. Certifications depend on your feedstock and target market; we help assemble the documentation.

What emissions controls are included?
Cyclones/hot-gas filtration and controlled oxidation on vents as required by permit. Final configurations are site-specific.


How to Specify Your System

  1. Define feed envelope: species/grade, moisture, ash, expected variability.
  2. Set product goals: oil vs. char yield priority, target markets (e.g., asphalt, soil, Marine fuel, Train fuel, SAF intermediate).
  3. Select scale: start with a 5–10 TPD module or go multi-line for 50–200+ TPD.
  4. Site constraints: power, fuel availability, footprint, indoor/outdoor preference, environmental thresholds.
  5. Engage iNBIO: We’ll provide a proposal with mass/energy balance, plot plan, and performance terms.