Whole comminuted trees are known to self-heat and undergo quality changes during storage. Trommel screening after grinding is a process that removes fines from the screened material and removes a large proportion of high-ash, high-nutrient material. In this study, the trade-off between an increase in preprocessing cost from trommel screening and an increase in quality of the screened material was examined. Fresh lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta) was comminuted using a drum grinder with a 10-cm screen, and the resulting material was distributed into separate fines and overs piles. A third pile of unscreened material, the unsorted pile, was also examined. The three piles exhibited different characteristics during a 6-week storage period. The overs pile was much slower to heat. The overs pile reached a maximum temperature of 56.8°C, which was lower than the maximum reached by the other two piles (65.9°C and 63.4°C for the unsorted and fines, respectively). The overs also cooled faster and dried to a more uniform moisture content and had a lower ash content than the other two piles. Both piles of sorted material exhibited improved airflow and more drying than the unsorted material. Looking at supply system costs from preprocessing through in-feed into thermochemical conversion, this study found that trommel screening reduced system costs by over $3.50 per dry matter ton and stabilized material during storage.
Contributor Notes
The authors are, respectively, Biofuels Analyst, Idaho National Lab., Idaho Falls (Erin.Searcy@inl.gov [corresponding author]); Biologist, Caribou-Targhee National Forest, Pocatello, Idaho (dbblackwelder@fs.fed.us); and Biologist (Mark.Delwiche@inl.gov), Microbiologist (Allison.Ray@inl.gov), and Harvest, Collection, and Storage Group Lead (Kevin.Kenney@inl.gov), Idaho National Lab., Idaho Falls. This paper was received for publication in September 2011. Article no. 11-00115.