Alteration of biomass toxicity in torrefaction - A XDS-CALUX bioassay study

Chemosphere. 2024 Mar:351:141258. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2024.141258. Epub 2024 Jan 20.

Abstract

Torrefaction constitutes one of the promising technologies for the management of waste biomass and the production of high-carbon products for combustion, gasification, adsorption of pollutants or soil treatment. Unfortunately, waste biomass may be contaminated with toxic persistent organic pollutants, such as polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans (PCDD/PCDF) and dioxin-like biphenyls (dl-PCB). Literature does not provide consistent measurements on how the low-temperature thermochemical processing, such as torrefaction, affects the toxicity of biomass. This contribution assesses how a torrefaction treatment, conducted at 200 °C, modifies the toxicity due to PCDD/PCDF/dl-PCB in biomass. We deploy the XDS-CALUX biotest on five types of waste biomass (sewage sludge, tree bark, cattle manure, spent coffee ground, common reed), before and after treatment. The content of total dioxin- & biphenyl fraction compounds in the raw biomass, investigated in this study, varies from 0.14 to 3.67 pg BEQ·g-1d.m., and in the torrefied biomass between 0.17 and 6.00 pg BEQ·g-1d.m.; BEQ stands for bioanalytical equivalent. This increase is statistically insignificant at p = 0.05, taking into account all types of examined biomass. This proves that low-temperature torrefaction cannot detoxify biomass, i.e., chars, produced from biomass characterized by elevated concentration of PCDD/PCDF/dl-PCB, will reflect the contamination of the feedstocks. With respect to heavy metals, we conclude that only the content of Cd in biomass, and, to a lesser extent, the abundance of Cu and Fe, modify the toxicity of this material during its thermochemical treatment at low temperature.

Keywords: Biomass toxicity; Dioxins; PCB; PCDD; PCDF; Torrefaction.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Benzofurans* / toxicity
  • Biological Assay
  • Biomass
  • Cattle
  • Dibenzofurans, Polychlorinated
  • Dioxins*
  • Polychlorinated Biphenyls* / analysis
  • Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins* / toxicity
  • Sewage

Substances

  • Dioxins
  • Polychlorinated Biphenyls
  • Benzofurans
  • Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins
  • Sewage
  • Dibenzofurans, Polychlorinated