Green Chemical Engineering (Jun 2024)
Sequential pyrolysis for understanding specific influence of cellulose- and lignin-derived volatiles on properties of counterpart char
Abstract
Interactions of cellulose- and lignin-derived intermediates have been well documented during pyrolysis of lignocellulosic biomass. The reaction network for the interactions is rather complex, as cellulose-derived volatiles could interact/react with not only lignin-derived volatiles but also lignin-derived char and vice versa. To probe specifically the impacts of cellulose-derived volatiles on the lignin-derived char or the opposite, herein the sequential pyrolysis was performed by arranging cellulose in the upper bed with lignin in the lower bed or lignin above with cellulose below at 350 and 650 °C, respectively. The results indicated that the sequential pyrolysis of cellulose→lignin or lignin→cellulose at 350 °C induced increased char yield from formation of carbonaceous deposits via volatiles-char interactions. Compared with the lignin-derived volatiles, the cellulose-derived volatiles, especially aldehyde fractions, were more reactive towards the lignin-derived char at 350 °C, forming oxygen-rich lignin-derived char with a higher yield, an abundance of aliphatic structures and consequently lower thermal stability. In sequential pyrolysis of lignin→cellulose, more aromatics-rich species were deposited on cellulose-derived char, but the lignin-derived volatiles were less reactive for enhancing the char yield. At 650 °C, instead of polymerisation of the volatiles on the char, either the cellulose- or lignin-derived char catalyzed the cracking of the counterpart volatiles to remove the aliphatic functionalities, which made the char more aromatic and thermally more stable.