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Correlation of Feedstock and Bio-oil Compound Distribution

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The correlation of feedstock with bio-oil compound distribution was explored with straw, shell, woody, and algae biomasses. The pyrolysis of 20 typical feedstock samples were performed using Pyrolysis–gas chromatography/mass spectrometry… Click to show full abstract

The correlation of feedstock with bio-oil compound distribution was explored with straw, shell, woody, and algae biomasses. The pyrolysis of 20 typical feedstock samples were performed using Pyrolysis–gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (Py–GC/MS) with a final temperature of 550 °C, heating rate of 10 000 °C/s, and residence time of 10 s. Biomass samples share a common characteristic, such as high oxygen and low nitrogen and sulfur, which is different from coal. The results revealed that there is a strong positive correlation between ketones and cellulose, furans and holocelluose, and phenols and lignin but a negative correlation between short-chain acids and ash content and hydrocarbons and cellulose. Woody biomass produced higher phenols; straw biomass produced high ketones; shell biomass produced high furans; and algae produced high fatty acids. However, some special points showed that Enteromorpha algae produced high furans and tobacco stems produced high N-containing compounds.

Keywords: correlation feedstock; correlation; feedstock bio; bio oil; produced high

Journal Title: Energy & Fuels
Year Published: 2017

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