Publication | Closed Access
GC/MS Characterization of Liquids Generated from Low-Temperature Pyrolysis of Wood
399
Citations
37
References
2003
Year
Chemical KineticsEngineeringGc/ms CharacterizationLignin ChemistryBiomass PyrolysisChemical EngineeringBiomass ConversionFuran DerivativesAnalytical PyrolysisAnalytical ChemistryApplied PyrolysisBiomassWood ComponentMaterials ScienceBiomass UtilizationConventional PyrolysisLigninPyrolysis ProcessBiomanufacturingEnvironmental EngineeringBeech WoodBiomass Characterization
Conventional pyrolysis of beech wood has been carried out for heating temperatures in the range 600−900 K, reproducing conditions of interest in countercurrent fixed-bed gasification. The yields of liquids (water and tars) increase with the heating temperature from about 40 to 55% of dry wood mass, confirming results previously obtained with a laboratory-scale gasifier. Apart from qualitative identification of ∼90 species, GC/MS techniques have been applied to quantify 40−43% of tars (40 species, with major contributions from acetic acid, hydroxypropanone, hydroxyacetaldehyde, levoglucosan, formic acid, syringol, and 2-furaldehyde). Decomposition of holocellulose leads to the formation of furan derivatives and carbohydrates, with a temperature-dominated selectivity toward hydroxyacetaldehyde against levoglucosan. Syringols and guaiacols, originating from primary degradation of lignin, present a maximum for heating temperatures of about 750−800 K whereas, owing to secondary degradation, phenols continuously increase. A comparison is also provided with fast pyrolysis liquids obtained from four commercial plants.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1