Biomass briquettes are increasingly used as renewable solid fuels, yet their durability under humid storage remains a key limitation. This study evaluated the mechanical performance and water resistance of briquettes made from fine (0–1 mm) and coarse (0–3 mm) charcoal fractions using molasses as a primary binder, polyvinyl alcohol (PVA, 3–7%) as a synthetic binder, and liquid soap (1–9%) as a surfactant additive. Compressive strength was measured in the dry state, after four days of water immersion, and after re-drying, while water absorption was monitored over immersion times from 15 min to 4 days. Fine-fraction briquettes showed higher strength and lower water uptake than coarse fractions, with optimal PVA contents of 6–7% providing maximum dry and post-drying strength. Moderate soap addition (2–3%) improved binder dispersion and early wet strength, whereas higher levels (>5%) reduced durability. Water absorption kinetics indicated that particle size controlled early swelling, while binder composition influenced the rate but not the final saturation. The best performance in humid storage was achieved by 0–1 mm + 4% PVA and 0–1 mm + 5% PVA + 3% soap formulations. These results support the formulation of eco-friendly binder systems that balance strength, moisture resistance, and cost for large-scale biomass briquette production.
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�. N. Korol'
Uzhhorod National University
Viktor Yankovych
AgroParisTech
Fuels
Uzhhorod National University
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Korol' et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68f9d6583f378872224926a7 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/fuels6040081