Abstract
Shredders are widely used to reduce biomass feedstock size through the shearing action of the cutter teeth that are susceptible to wear. A series of wear tests using a custom-built shredder was conducted on corn stover feedstock with three cutter materials: a conventional D2 tool steel, iron boriding as a candidate surface treatment, and M42 tool steel as a candidate alloy. Wear tests showed that the iron borided D2 steel significantly increased the tool life compared with the non-treated D2 and M42. Although the M42 cutters initially exhibited less wear than the D2 cutters, the benefit faded as preprocessing progressed. The experimental results demonstrated that the durability of shredder cutters can be substantially improved by applying more wear-resistant tool materials.