Affiliation:
1. Kyoto University, Graduate School of Energy Science, Yoshida-honmachi, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto, Japan
Abstract
Gas-phase conversions of volatile intermediates from cellulose (AvicelPH-101)
were studied using a two-stage experimental setup and compared with those of
levoglucosan (1,6-anhydro-b-D-glucopyranose). Under N2or 7% O2/N2flow, vapors
produced from the pyrolysis zone (500?C) degraded in the secondary reaction
zone at 400,500, 600 or 900?C (residence time:0.8-1.4 s). The 69.3% (C-based)
of levoglucosan was obtained at 400?C under N2flow along with
1,6-anhydro-b-D-glucofuranose (8.3 %, C-based), indicating that these
anhydrosugars are the major volatile intermediates from cellulose pyrolysis.
Levoglucosan and other volatiles started to fragment at 600?C, and cellulose
was completely gasified at 900?C. Most gas/tar formations are explained by
gas-phase reactions of levoglucosan reported previously, except for some
minor reactions originating from the molten-phase pyrolysis, which produced
benzene, furans and 1,6-anhydro-b-D-glucofuranose. Synergetic effects of
O2and volatiles accelerated fragmentation and cellulose gasification was
completed at 600?C, which reduced benzene and hydrocarbon gas productions.
The molecular mechanisms including the action of O2as a biradical are
discussed. These lines of information provide insights into the development
of tar-free clean gasification that maintains high efficiency.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Subject
General Chemical Engineering
Cited by
14 articles.
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