Modelling the kinetics of pyrolysis oil hydrothermal upgrading based on the connectivity of oxygen atoms, quantified by 31P-NMR

In the light of current environmental concerns, pyrolysis of biomass offers a carbon neutral pathway to cheap renewable fuels known collectively as pyrolysis oil (PO). However, crude PO is not immediately usable in the current energy infrastructure and needs to be deoxygenated via upgrading technolo...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inBiomass & bioenergy Vol. 98; pp. 272 - 290
Main Authors Sharifzadeh, Mahdi, Richard, Christian J., Shah, Nilay
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.03.2017
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:In the light of current environmental concerns, pyrolysis of biomass offers a carbon neutral pathway to cheap renewable fuels known collectively as pyrolysis oil (PO). However, crude PO is not immediately usable in the current energy infrastructure and needs to be deoxygenated via upgrading technologies. Upgrading reactions are invariably complex since the chemical components in PO can run into hundreds. Moreover, these components are often very difficult to characterise, posing difficulties towards tracking their chemical reactivity and the overall kinetics as a function of time. To address this problem, the aim of this work is to present a modelling strategy to help researchers predict the kinetics of PO deoxygenation in hot compressed water, under hydrothermal conditions, near to or at the supercritical region. To do this, a trial reaction network superstructure with the maximum degrees of freedom was formulated and evaluated for the deoxygenation of three different Oils. This superstructure was based on the connectivity of an oxygen atom matrix which was quantified based on hydroxy groups by quantitative 31P{H} NMR. The complexity of the large-scale superstructure was subsequently simplified by trimming insignificant arcs; subject to an empirical understanding of the underlying chemistry. By parameter estimations, reaction networks were validated or rejected, depending on whether the computationally simulated data for a given reaction network fits the experimental results. It is anticipated that the development of the disclosed “proof of concept” models could promote the chemical understanding and hence optimization of hydrothermal upgrading technologies. •Pyrolysis oils are highly complex with hundreds of species.•A new modelling framework was proposed, which is based on the connectivity of oxygen atoms.•Aliphatic OH groups were found to be the most reactive hydroxy groups.•The interconversion of OH groups was not negligible, requiring insight into mechanistics of their creation and destruction.•Future studies should investigate the reactivity of OH groups which are not dateable by P-NMR analysis.
ISSN:0961-9534
1873-2909
DOI:10.1016/j.biombioe.2017.01.022