Study of the Pyrolysis of Straw Biomass for Bio-oil Production and its Catalytic Upgrading

Date
2016
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Abstract
This thesis presents a comprehensive study of the pyrolysis of lignocellulosic biomass (sawdust, wheat, oat, flax and barley straws). In the first part of the study, the pyrolysis of sawdust was observed using a thermogravimetric analyzer (TGA), in order to understand the devolatilization process and to obtain its global kinetic parameters. The influences of particle size, initial weight of the sample and heating rate on the devolatilization of sawdust particles were assessed. It was observed that the pyrolysis of sawdust differed significantly with variations in heating rate. As the heating rate increased, the char yield also increased. The kinetic parameters, including activation energy (E), frequency factor (k0) and order of reaction (n), for the two stages considered in the model were: EA2 = 79.53 (kJ/mol), EA3 = 60.71 (kJ/mol); k02 = 1.90 × 106 (1/min), k03 = 1.01 × 103 (1/min); n2 = 0.91, n3 = 1.78, respectively. In the second part of the study, the pyrolysis of several Canadian straw biomasses was studied using a TGA and a bench-scale horizontal fixed-bed reactor. The effects of various catalysts on product yields are discussed. When using zeolite catalysts, the bio-oil and bio-char yields of the straw pyrolysis increased to 46.44% and 38.77%, respectively, while the gas yield was decreased to 13.65%. The use of the catalyst zeolite ZY-SS had the most significant effect on overall bio-oil and bio-char yields, increasing the bio-oil yield by about 2% and the bio-char yield by 8%. A screening of different catalysts unveiled that Ni-Mo/TiO2 was the most active catalyst. The structure was investigated using Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) surface area showed that the Ni-Mo/TiO2 catalyst presented a higher surface area and more optimal mesopores than Ni-V/TiO2. Based on the results, it appears that the significant hydrodeoxygenation (HDO) activity for both the catalysts attributed to a high dispersion of metals and acidic sites, which was affected by the interaction between the nickel and the titania support. The activation energy (E) values for guaiacol reactions over Ni-Mo/TiO2 and Ni-V/TiO2 were 93.6 and 98.4 kj/mol, respectively; and, the E values for anisole reactions over Ni-Mo/TiO2 and Ni-V/TiO2 were 80.9 and 53.9 kj/mol, respectively.
Description
Keywords
Engineering--Chemical
Citation
Aqsha, A. (2016). Study of the Pyrolysis of Straw Biomass for Bio-oil Production and its Catalytic Upgrading (Doctoral thesis, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada). Retrieved from https://prism.ucalgary.ca. doi:10.11575/PRISM/27922