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Effects of Potassium Hydroxide Impregnation on Wood Pyrolysis
91
Citations
44
References
2009
Year
Biomass UtilizationChemical EngineeringBiomass ConversionEngineeringBiomass CharacterizationPotassium Hydroxide ImpregnationPacked BedKoh ConcentrationFir Wood ParticlesApplied PyrolysisChemistryLignin ChemistryWood ComponentPyrolysis Process
The pyrolysis of a packed bed of fir wood particles, after impregnation with KOH, is investigated. For a heating temperature of 800 K, maximum variations in the pyrolysis characteristics are observed for KOH concentrations in wood below 1%. Decomposition temperatures become lower (35−70 K), and conversion times are rapidly more than halved. Also, the char, water, and gas yields increase (factors of 1.4, 1.6, and 1.7, respectively) at the expense of liquid-phase organic products. Levoglucosan presents a very steep decay, whereas the diminution in hydroxyacetaldehyde and acid acetic is much slower, and a wide zone of approximately constant values appears for hydroxypropanone. However, small quantities of KOH in wood (about 0.2−0.6%) are apt to increase the yields of furfuryl alcohol up to a factor 15 and some carbohydrates (3-ethyl-2-hydroxy-2-cyclopentenone, 3-methyl-2-cyclopentenone, 1-hydroxy-2-butanone) and phenols (phenol, cresols, hydroquinone, guaiacol, isoeugenol-trans, isoeugenol-cis, 4-acetonguaiacol, 4-ethylguaiacol) up to factors of 2−6. Higher KOH concentrations cause a further increase in the yields of char and CO2 associated with a decay to very small yields of all of the organic compounds. Finally, increasing the heating temperature from 600 to 900 K (KOH concentration in wood of about 0.6%) essentially favors devolatilization and cracking of vapor-phase organic products with conversion times roughly reduced by a factor of 6.
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