Hong Tian , Huang Zhang , Zhangjun Huang , Xueliang Guo , Shan Cheng , Yang Yang , Yi Cheng , Jiawei Wang
{"title":"Balancing bio-oil quality and yield during rapid pyrolysis of Miscanthus using ZSM-5 and metal oxides","authors":"Hong Tian , Huang Zhang , Zhangjun Huang , Xueliang Guo , Shan Cheng , Yang Yang , Yi Cheng , Jiawei Wang","doi":"10.1016/j.biombioe.2024.107423","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><div>Given the outstanding selective catalytic and deoxygenation abilities of ZSM-5, it has a great potential to enrich aromatics in catalytic biomass pyrolysis to oil, while metal oxides as catalysts have the ability to reduce the molecular size of compounds, which can weaken the limitation of ZSM-5 to macromolecular intermediates. In this study, metal oxides and ZSM-5 were chosen as catalysts to further extend the advantages of selective catalysis. In this paper, microscopic and bench-scale experiments for the conversion of biomass to high-yield aromatics using ZSM-5 and metal oxide catalysts were systematically investigated. In a dual catalyst pyrolysis study involving ZSM-5 and metal oxides (CaO, MgO, NiO, MoO<sub>3</sub>), PY-GC-MS, Tube Furnace experiments were used to evaluate various catalyst layouts. The influence of catalyst dose on three-phase product yields was examined in a bench-scale fixed bed reactor employing the optimal architecture and metal oxides. The findings revealed that the dual-catalyst arrangement was critical to improving bio-oil quality. The best yield (50.02 %) of monocyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (MAHs) was produced by combining Miscanthus with the metal oxides and then separating with ZSM-5. Among the four metal oxides, CaO had the greatest synergistic effect on MAHs and selectivity. The inclusion of CaO decreased the concentration of several oxygenated compounds, particularly the suppression of furans, phenols, and acids, which was extremely advantageous for improving bio-oil quality. The highest percentage of hydrocarbon production (64.61 %) in bio-oil was produced at a Miscanthus to CaO to ZSM-5 ratio of 1:2:4, however increasing catalyst dose reduces bio-oil yield (28.92 %).</div></div>","PeriodicalId":253,"journal":{"name":"Biomass & Bioenergy","volume":"190 ","pages":"Article 107423"},"PeriodicalIF":5.8000,"publicationDate":"2024-10-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Biomass & Bioenergy","FirstCategoryId":"5","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0961953424003763","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"生物学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERING","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Given the outstanding selective catalytic and deoxygenation abilities of ZSM-5, it has a great potential to enrich aromatics in catalytic biomass pyrolysis to oil, while metal oxides as catalysts have the ability to reduce the molecular size of compounds, which can weaken the limitation of ZSM-5 to macromolecular intermediates. In this study, metal oxides and ZSM-5 were chosen as catalysts to further extend the advantages of selective catalysis. In this paper, microscopic and bench-scale experiments for the conversion of biomass to high-yield aromatics using ZSM-5 and metal oxide catalysts were systematically investigated. In a dual catalyst pyrolysis study involving ZSM-5 and metal oxides (CaO, MgO, NiO, MoO3), PY-GC-MS, Tube Furnace experiments were used to evaluate various catalyst layouts. The influence of catalyst dose on three-phase product yields was examined in a bench-scale fixed bed reactor employing the optimal architecture and metal oxides. The findings revealed that the dual-catalyst arrangement was critical to improving bio-oil quality. The best yield (50.02 %) of monocyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (MAHs) was produced by combining Miscanthus with the metal oxides and then separating with ZSM-5. Among the four metal oxides, CaO had the greatest synergistic effect on MAHs and selectivity. The inclusion of CaO decreased the concentration of several oxygenated compounds, particularly the suppression of furans, phenols, and acids, which was extremely advantageous for improving bio-oil quality. The highest percentage of hydrocarbon production (64.61 %) in bio-oil was produced at a Miscanthus to CaO to ZSM-5 ratio of 1:2:4, however increasing catalyst dose reduces bio-oil yield (28.92 %).
期刊介绍:
Biomass & Bioenergy is an international journal publishing original research papers and short communications, review articles and case studies on biological resources, chemical and biological processes, and biomass products for new renewable sources of energy and materials.
The scope of the journal extends to the environmental, management and economic aspects of biomass and bioenergy.
Key areas covered by the journal:
• Biomass: sources, energy crop production processes, genetic improvements, composition. Please note that research on these biomass subjects must be linked directly to bioenergy generation.
• Biological Residues: residues/rests from agricultural production, forestry and plantations (palm, sugar etc), processing industries, and municipal sources (MSW). Papers on the use of biomass residues through innovative processes/technological novelty and/or consideration of feedstock/system sustainability (or unsustainability) are welcomed. However waste treatment processes and pollution control or mitigation which are only tangentially related to bioenergy are not in the scope of the journal, as they are more suited to publications in the environmental arena. Papers that describe conventional waste streams (ie well described in existing literature) that do not empirically address ''new'' added value from the process are not suitable for submission to the journal.
• Bioenergy Processes: fermentations, thermochemical conversions, liquid and gaseous fuels, and petrochemical substitutes
• Bioenergy Utilization: direct combustion, gasification, electricity production, chemical processes, and by-product remediation
• Biomass and the Environment: carbon cycle, the net energy efficiency of bioenergy systems, assessment of sustainability, and biodiversity issues.