GROUNDNUT SHELLS BRIQUETTING TO MEET FUEL ENERGY REQUIREMENTS

J.K. GAUR1, A.K. SINGH2, S. POONIA3*
1College of Agriculture, Swami Keshwanand Rajasthan Agricultural University, Bichhwal, Bikaner, 334006, Rajasthan, India
2ICAR-Central Arid Zone and Research Institute, Jodhpur, 342 003, Rajasthan, India
3ICAR-Central Arid Zone and Research Institute, Jodhpur, 342 003, Rajasthan, India
* Corresponding Author : poonia.surendra@gmail.com

Received : 01-05-2023     Accepted : 28-05-2023     Published : 30-05-2023
Volume : 15     Issue : 5       Pages : 12336 - 12338
Int J Agr Sci 15.5 (2023):12336-12338

Keywords : Groundnut shells, Bulk Density, Briquetting, Piston Press, Thermal Applications, Economic Feasibility
Conflict of Interest : None declared
Acknowledgements/Funding : Authors are thankful to College of Agriculture, Swami Keshwanand Rajasthan Agricultural University, Bichhwal, Bikaner, 334006, Rajasthan, India and ICAR-Central Arid Zone and Research Institute, Jodhpur, 342003, Rajasthan, India
Author Contribution : All authors equally contributed

Cite - MLA : GAUR, J.K., et al "GROUNDNUT SHELLS BRIQUETTING TO MEET FUEL ENERGY REQUIREMENTS." International Journal of Agriculture Sciences 15.5 (2023):12336-12338.

Cite - APA : GAUR, J.K., SINGH, A.K., POONIA, S. (2023). GROUNDNUT SHELLS BRIQUETTING TO MEET FUEL ENERGY REQUIREMENTS. International Journal of Agriculture Sciences, 15 (5), 12336-12338.

Cite - Chicago : GAUR, J.K., A.K. SINGH, and S. POONIA. "GROUNDNUT SHELLS BRIQUETTING TO MEET FUEL ENERGY REQUIREMENTS." International Journal of Agriculture Sciences 15, no. 5 (2023):12336-12338.

Copyright : © 2023, J.K. GAUR, et al, Published by Bioinfo Publications. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

Abstract

India stands second in producing groundnut after China. Groundnut shell is the waste product of groundnut processing which is one-fifth of the dried product. Generally, these groundnut shells are either burnt or buried, or disposed of inefficiently. Apart from the problems of transportation, storage, and handling, the direct burning of loose groundnut shells in conventional grates is associated with very low thermal efficiency and widespread air pollution. Rich in lignin, groundnut shells undergo slow degradation in the natural environment. An alternate better use may be converting low bulk-density groundnut shells into high-density energy-concentrated solid fuels termed briquettes and pellets. These briquettes or pellets have higher thermal value, low ash content, and combustion is more uniform. Briquettes are ready substitutes for coal/wood in industrial boilers and brick kilns for thermal applications. There is no fly ash when burning bio-briquettes. The use of briquettes/pellets as a coal co-firing solution saw a boost in mid-2021 when India’s power ministry set up a national mission on the use of these solid biofuels in coal-based power plants. The residue compaction methods are the screw press, piston press, roller press, and palletizing machines. A review of groundnut shell briquetting and major constraints being faced by the industries have been presented in this paper

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