Superheated water, along with
supercritical water, has been used to oxidise hazardous material in the wet oxidation process. Organic compounds are rapidly
oxidised without the production of toxic materials sometimes produced by combustion. However, when the oxygen levels are lower, organic compounds can be quite stable in superheated water. As the concentration of
hydronium () and
hydroxide () ions are 100 times larger than in water at 25 °C, superheated water can act as a stronger
acid and a stronger
base, and many different types of reaction can be carried out. An example of a selective reaction is oxidation of
ethylbenzene to
acetophenone, with no evidence of formation of
phenylethanoic acid, or of
pyrolysis products.
Triglycerides can be hydrolysed to
free fatty acids and
glycerol by superheated water at 275 °C, which can be the first in a two-stage process to make
biodiesel. Superheated water can be used to chemically convert organic material into fuel products. This is known by several terms, including direct hydrothermal liquefaction, and
hydrous pyrolysis. A few commercial scale applications exist.
Thermal depolymerization or thermal conversion (TCC) uses superheated water at about 250 °C to convert turkey waste into a light
fuel oil and is said to process 200 tons of low grade waste into fuel oil a day. {{cite web The initial product from the hydrolysis reaction is de-watered and further processed by dry cracking at 500 °C. The "SlurryCarb" process operated by EnerTech uses similar technology to decarboxylate wet solid biowaste, which can then be physically dewatered and used as a solid fuel called E-Fuel. The plant at
Rialto is said to be able to process 683 tons of waste per day. {{cite web The HTU or Hydro Thermal Upgrading process appears similar to the first stage of the TCC process. A demonstration plant is due to start up in The Netherlands said to be capable of processing 64 tons of biomass (
dry basis) per day into oil.{{cite web ==Chromatography==