Zobrazeno 1 - 6
of 6
pro vyhledávání: '"Hindrek Tamvelius"'
Autor:
Mihhail Bitjukov, Hans Luik, Vilja Palu, Ille Johannes, Natalia Vink, Lea Luik, Kristjan Kruusement, Igor Nechaev, Julia Krasulina, Laine Tiikma, Hindrek Tamvelius
Publikováno v:
Fuel Processing Technology. 124:115-122
Possibilities for upgrading of the Estonian shale oil rectification residuum boiling above 360 °C by hydroconversion were studied for the first time with the aim to maximize the fractions boiling below 360 °C and between 275–360 °C. The single-
Publikováno v:
ISRN Chemical Engineering. 2012:1-11
A short review on the publications concerning thermal liquefaction of solid fuels in the environment of hydrogen donor solvents and catalysts is compiled. New experimental results on the catalytic thermal dissolution of oil shale in tetralin as the h
Publikováno v:
Journal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis. 85:492-496
Two different Estonian oil shales, peat, and willow biomass were submitted to supercritical water conversion at unified operating conditions. The yield and chemical composition of conversion products were investigated by chromatographic, FTIR-spectro
Publikováno v:
Journal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis. 79:191-195
Copyrolysis of heavy shale oil with polyethylene (PE) waste in autoclaves at various temperatures and times has been studied. It is shown that the copyrolysis improves the quality of the oil obtained and gives possibility to transform the wastes into
Publikováno v:
Journal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis. 72:113-119
Basing on the thermal degradation of low-density polyethylene, a simple step-by-step mathematical model was developed to describe the co-effects of time and temperature on the overall yields of oil, gas and coke for pyrolysis of organic subjects in a
Publikováno v:
Oil Shale. 29:222
Kukersite oil shale + pine bark, kukersite oil shale + peat as well as kukersite, bark and peat individually were submitted to thermochemical liquefaction in an autoclave with and without solvent for two hours at different temperatures from 340 to 42