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Synergetic effect of co-pyrolysis of cellulose and PP over an allsilica mesoporous catalyst MCM-41 using TG-FTIR and Py-GC-MS Junjie Xue, Jiankun Zhuo, Mi Liu, Yongchao Chi, Dahu Zhang, and Qiang Yao Energy Fuels, Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.energyfuels.7b01651 • Publication Date (Web): 27 Jul 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on July 28, 2017
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Synergetic effect of co-pyrolysis of cellulose and PP over an all-silica mesoporous catalyst MCM-41 using TG-FTIR and Py-GC-MS Xue Junjie, Zhuo jiankun*, Liu Mi, Chi Yongchao, Zhang Dahu, Yao Qiang Key Laboratory for Thermal Science and Power Engineering of Ministry of Education, Department of Thermal Engineering, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China
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Abstract Biomass is one of the promising alternative materials to solve the energy and
12
environment crisis. Fast pyrolysis is one of the most economical and commercially
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realizable technology to convert the biomass to useable fuels and chemicals. To
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improve the liquid products, co-pyrolysis with propylene (PP) over a mesoporous
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catalyst MCM-41 was studied in this paper. TG-FTIR and Py-GC-MS were used as
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the main analysis methods to study the mass loss and the detailed products of the
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co-pyrolysis. The mass loss, main functional groups and identified products of
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pyrolysis of cellulose, PP and their mixture were analyzed and discussed. All the TG,
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FTIR and Py-GC-MS data show there is no significant synergism between the
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cellulose and PP when simply mixing them, though the C/H eff of the mixture
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increases from 0 to 1.3. However, the addition of MCM-41 bring significant
22
synergism. The TG and DTG data show the co-pyrolysis with MCM-41 shifts the
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decomposition of PP to lower temperature, which provides more overlap between
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cellulose and PP in the range of 300-400°C. According to the FTIR spectra, there are
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also CO, CO2 and carbonyl produced in the peak supposed for pyrolysis of PP for the
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mixture together with MCM-41, which indicates the intermolecular synergetic
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reaction. Furthermore, the results from Py-GC/MS show olefins (43.9%), oxygenated
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compounds (24.8%, mainly alcohols) and aromatic (17.8%) are the main products of
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co-pyrolysis of cellulose and PP in the presence of MCM-41, while the oxygenated
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compounds (82.2%, mainly saccharides), olefins (4.7%) and aromatic (1.1%) will be
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the main products without catalyst. The olefins and alcohols are much more than the
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calculated value, which are the main result of synergism. The alcohols are mainly
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produced from the radical from cracking of PP combines with the hydroxyl radical
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produced from decomposition of cellulose. While the olefins are produced from
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interaction reaction (carbenium ion reaction and β-scission) between the primary
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products of the cellulose and hydrocarbon pool reaction of primary products of
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cellulose and PP. The results of this study enhance the understanding of co-pyrolysis
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of cellulose and PP in the presence of MCM-41 and provide the possible pathway of
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modifying the special pyrolysis products in catalytic pyrolysis of biomass with
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polymers.
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Keywords: Co-pyrolysis, cellulose, PP, catalyst, synergism
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1. Introduction Today, energy and environment problems have become one of the major problem
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of the survival and development of human society.1 Biomass is an important part of
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renewable energy, which can provide abundant carbon. What’s more, biomass will
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trap and use the CO2 by photosynthesis when they grow up. These advantages make
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biomass one of the promising alternative materials to solve the energy and
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environment crisis. As a result, realizing the high efficiency of biomass conversion is
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now an important development strategy of most country around the world.2
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Pyrolysis is one of the effective ways to convert the biomass to liquid fuel and
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chemicals. Fast pyrolysis is one of the most economical and commercially realizable
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technology by rapid heating the biomass for bio-oil under no oxygen, which has few
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limitation of raw material, high throughput and high reaction rate. 3-5 However, the
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liquid fuel has high oxygen contents (10-40 wt%), low calorific value (16-19 MJ/kg,
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about half that of crude oil ) and strong acidity (pH from 2 to 4). 6 As a result, the
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liquid fuel cannot be used directly. 6 In 1986, Chen et al. put forward the concept of
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effective hydrogen to carbon ratio (Eq. (1)) to estimate if the raw material is able to be
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converted to hydrocarbon chemicals economically.
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H − 2O Hൗ Ceff = C
(1)
The research indicates the raw material with a H/Ceff value of 1~2 can be
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converted to petroleum products. While the raw material with a H/Ceff value lower
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than 1 will produce more coke, which will deactivate the catalyst, and fail to produce
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high quality liquid fuel.7 The H/Ceff value of lignocellulosic biomass is between 0~0.3,
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which means lignocellulosic biomass is lack of hydrogen. 8 Some researchers studied
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the co-pyrolysis of biomass with high H/Ceff value material like alcohols (methanol
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and butanol). The results show co-pyrolysis increases the yield of petroleum
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chemicals and decreases yield of the unwanted coke. 9-10
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Waste plastics are much cheaper material with high H/Ceff value, like the two most
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commonly used plastics polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene (PP) with very high
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H/Ceff value being 2. Besides, waste plastics are abundant. The global production of
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plastic has reached about 322 million tons in 2015 and has increased by 3.5% over
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2014.11 The polymeric wastes may take up to billions of years to degrade naturally
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and result in environmental impact, which is concerned by the public.12-13 To recycle
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the waste plastics and reuse them is of significance. In addition, biomass and plastics
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are main components of municipal solid waste (MSW), like the package in food
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industry, which are difficult to be separated.14 In conclusion, co-pyrolysis of biomass
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and plastics is promising to effectively convert the biomass and waste plastics to
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valuable liquid fuels and chemicals.15
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Several researches concerning co-pyrolysis of biomass and plastics has been
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reported.16-18 Some researchers found there is no noticeable cross reaction products
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between pine and plastics or their decomposition products when co-pyrolysis without
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catalyst.16 But other researchers reported the yield of bio-oil increased when
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co-pyrolysis of pine and plastic. 15 And alcohol will increase in the bio-oil product if
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co-pyrolysis of cellulose and PP. 19
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Furthermore, the addition of proper catalyst is expected to reduce decomposition
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temperature, to promote decomposition speed, and to modify the products. 20 The
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mechanism for the improvements is the presence of the catalyst may change the
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reaction path and the activation energy. 17-18, 21-23 For example, the addition of a
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catalyst in polymer pyrolysis processes helps the hydrogen transfer reaction due to the
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presence of acid active centers inside the catalyst.24 And there will be significant
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synergism. The effective and most used catalyst is zeolite HZSM-5, with which the
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yield of petrochemical product will be enhanced, and more aromatic compounds and
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olefin will be produced.2, 17-18
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However, due to the bulky nature of the polyolefin, especially the larger molecules
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with branched structure like PP, the pore structure (pore size: 5.1 × 5.5 Å, internal
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pore space: 6.4 Å) of the HZSM-5 is not big enough for the entrance and diffusion of
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the reactant molecules, and the catalyst activity will be limited. 1, 13, 25 Besides, the
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high acidity of the HZSM-5 leads to the excessive cracking of the cellulose and
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plastics, which results in the carbon deposit and deactivation of the catalyst.26
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Research found catalyst with bigger pore size will improve the diffusion limitation,
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and the bigger plastic molecules can access the inner active site. 1 That means the
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catalyst will be more effective only when its structure is accessible for the plastic
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molecules. 24-25
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MCM-41 is a silica catalyst with mesoporous pore size (2-50 nm), which is more
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effective to catalyze reactions involving high volume molecules with non-ignorable
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steric hindrance, and which will improve the limitation of the HZSM-5. 13, 24, 27
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Besides, MCM-41 can also decrease the content of unwanted carboxylic acids and
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carbonyl functionalities and increasing the quantity of desirable hydrocarbons, which
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will upgrade the bio-oil. 27 It is promising to study the co-pyrolysis of cellulose and
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polymer together with MCM-41, which may improve the products. However, there is
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little knowledge about the co-pyrolysis of cellulose and PP in the presence of
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MCM-41.
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This study will focus on the synergetic effect of co-pyrolysis of cellulose and PP
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over an all-silica MCM-41 catalyst, aiming at improving the products distribution and
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giving more information about the mechanism of co-pyrolysis of cellulose and PP
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over MCM-41 by analysis the pyrolytic kinetic data and the yield and distribution of
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the pyrolysis products.
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2. Material and methods 2.1 Cellulose, Polypropylene (PP) and MCM-41 The cellulose was bought from Alfa Aesar company, whose chemical formular is
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[C6H10O5]n. The polypropylene (PP) was bought from Shanghai YangLi mechanical
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and electrical technology company, whose chemical formular is [C3H6]n. The catalyst
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MCM-41 was bought from the Catalyst Factory of Nankai University, which is made
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from silicon. All of the sample and the catalyst are fine powder.
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2.2 TG-FTIR Experiment To analyze the pyrolysis products and measure the weight change of the sample at the same time, the thermogravimetric analyzer (STA449F3, Netzsch, Germany) was
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connected to a FTIR spectrometer (VERTEX70V, Bruker, Germany) using thermal
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insulation pipeline, which was made from teflon. The temperature of the pipeline and
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the FTIR sample chamber were kept at 200 oC. About 11 mg sample and
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corresponding MCM-41 was put in the Al2O3 sample cup. The mass ratio of MCM-41
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to sample is 10:1. Argon was used as protecting gas. And the gas flow is 60 ml/min.
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The heating procedure started from room temperature and ended at 1000oC at the
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heating rate of 20oC/min. For the FTIR experiment, the scanning was performed in
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the range of 650~4000 cm-1 at the resolution of 4cm-1 and repeated for 16 times.
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2.3 Py-GC/MS Experiment
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To get more information of the primary reaction products, the fast pyrolyzer
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(5200HP, CDS, USA) was connected to the gas chromatograph-mass spectrometer
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(Clarus 560S, PerkinElmer, USA). Sample was put in the quartz tube, which can be
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inserted in the pyrolyzer. About 0.1 mg sample (cellulose, PP, and their mixture (1:1
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in weight)) was put in the center of the quartz tube first, then every 0.5 mg MCM-41
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was put in the both ends of the quartz tube. At last, the silica wool was used at both
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end of the quartz tube to avoid the solid powder being blew out of the tube. The
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prepared tube was inserted in the pyrolyzer, which will heat from room temperature to
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650 oC at 20 oC/ms and the temperature will be kept at 650 oC for 30 s. All the volatile
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products were analyzed on-line using the GC-MS part. The TR-35 MS capillary
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column (30m×0.25mm×0.25μm) was used. High purity (99.999%) Helium was
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used as carrier gas, whose flow rate was 1mL/min. The split ratio was 1:80. The
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heating procedure of the GC column was firstly kept at 40 oC for 4 min, then heated to
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180 oC at heating rate of 4 oC/min, afterwards, heated to 280 oC at 10 oC/min and kept
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at 280 oC for 4 min. The temperature of all the connection line and the injection port
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was kept at 280 oC to avoid condensation of the products. For the MS part, the
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electron, whose energy is 70 eV, was used to activate the products and get the
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expected ion. Qualitative analysis of the pyrolysis products was based on the NIST
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library, Wiley library and publications. 19-20, 25, 34-35
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3. Results and discussion 3.1 TG and DTG analysis Without catalyst MCM-41: The TG and DTG curves of pyrolysis of cellulose, PP
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and their mixture under argon atmosphere are shown as Figure 1a and 1b. The
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characteristic pyrolysis parameters of cellulose, PP and their mixture are shown as
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Table 1. According to the results, the cellulose mainly decomposes in the range of
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300-388 oC, and the max mass loss rate appears at 354 oC (Figure 1b). While the PP
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mainly decomposes at higher temperature in the period of 411-501 oC, and the max
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decomposing rate appears at 473 oC (Figure 1b). For the co-pyrolysis of cellulose and
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PP, there are two pyrolysis stages according to the DTG curve (Figure 1b). The first
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stage starts from 306oC and ends at 370 oC, and the weight loss ratio of this stage is
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about 28.5 wt%. While the second stage took place in the period of 419-505 oC, and
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the weight loss ratio in this range is 60.7 wt%. The weight loss ratio of the second
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stage is 2.1 times of the first one. The max weight lose rate of these two stages appear
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at 350 oC and 475 oC, respectively. According to the results of the pyrolysis
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temperature period and max weight loss ratio of the mixture, they are very close to the
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temperature when they decompose individually, which suggests there is no significant
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synergistic effect between the co-pyrolysis of cellulose and PP. Similar results for the
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TG behavior have been reported by other researchers. 18, 28-29
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With MCM-41: Notably, the pyrolysis temperature of PP is reduced with the
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appearance of MCM-41. According to the results, the pyrolysis temperature of PP is
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reduced significantly from 411-501 oC to 277-491oC. However, the pyrolysis
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temperature of cellulose is still in the similar range of 302-392oC (Table 1). That
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means there will be a wider overlap region between their pyrolysis temperature
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(Figure 1b), which is a great advantage for the synergistic reaction. The co-pyrolysis
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results show the first pyrolysis stage is strengthened with a weight loss ratio being
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36.0 wt%. And the weight loss ratio of second stage is 50.2 wt%. They are all
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calculated by normalization, which is regardless of the catalyst weight. The weight
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loss ratio of the second stage is 1.4 times of the first one. All these data show that
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there is really significant synergistic reaction in the co-pyrolysis of cellulose and PP
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when the MCM-41 is added, which strengthens the reaction in the lower temperature.
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Marcilla et al. reported the maximum mass loss temperature decreased by 110 oC
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when loaded 16 wt% of the MCM-41. And their data revealed a reduction in the
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activation energy of the catalytic decomposition. 24 Other researchers have also
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reported the consistent results of the synergism of the catalytic co-pyrolysis. 12, 24, 30
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3.2 Products analysis by on-line FTIR
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3.2.1 Products from pyrolysis of cellulose, PP and their mixture
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Products with lower molecular weight, like CO2, CO and other oxygenated
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chemicals, can be measured using mid-infrared (FTIR) spectrum. From the
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information of the FTIR, possible reaction mechanism of the pyrolysis of cellulose,
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PP, and their mixture can be speculated. 19, 28-29, 31-33 The wavenumber-to-compound
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information are shown as Table 2.
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Without MCM-41: The FTIR spectra of the products from the first mass loss peak
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(mainly from cellulose pyrolysis) and second mass loss peak (mainly from PP
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pyrolysis) are shown as Figure 2a and Figure 2b. According to Figure 2a, there are
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obvious several peaks in the FTIR spectra, which are the information about CO2, CO
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and other oxygenated chemicals (Table 1). The spectrum of the mixture (PP:
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cellulose=1:1 wt%) from the first mass loss is almost the same as the pure cellulose.
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Moreover, the products from the mixture of cellulose and PP is also almost the same
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as the pure PP for the second mass loss peak. That means there is no significant
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synergetic reaction between cellulose and PP without MCM-41 (Figure 2).
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With MCM-41: For the first mass loss peak, which is mainly come from pyrolysis
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of cellulose, the enhancement in the intensity of the bands in the cellulose together
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with MCM-41 sample reflects all of the products increase apparently, except alcohols,
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which means the MCM-41 promotes the further cracking of the cellulose (Figure 2).
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For the cellulose and PP together with MCM-41, carboxyl compound (1179 cm-1) and
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alcohols (1110 cm-1) disappear. Compared to the cellulose, the carbonyl (1742 cm-1),
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furan (749 cm-1) and hydrocarbon compounds decrease apparently. While small
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molecular like CO2 and CO increase significantly. Notably, there are two new peaks
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(2183 cm-1 and 2113 cm-1) in both of the two samples with MCM-41 in the first mass
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loss peak, which is attributed to the alkyne bond “C≡C” or conjugated dienes
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“C=C-C=C”. For the second mass loss peak, the yield of alkanes and olefins decrease
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slightly for both of the two samples when the MCM-41 added in (Figure 2b). Besides,
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there is one more peak (2881 cm-1) in both of two samples with MCM-41 in the
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second mass loss peak, which is attributed to the methyne bond “C-H”. The results
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suggest the MCM-41 may promote the dehydrogenation and produce more
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unsaturated products in the pyrolysis of cellulose or/and PP. Furthermore, MCM-41
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will strengthen the deoxidized reaction (Figure 2) in the co-pyrolysis of cellulose and
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PP, which results in the increase of CO2 and CO.
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3.2.2 Main change of the products along with pyrolysis temperature
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Main products like furan compound (749 cm-1), alcohols (1110 cm-1), carboxyl
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compound (1179 cm-1), carbonyl compound (1742 cm-1), CO (2352 cm-1), CO2 (2755
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cm-1) and hydrocarbon compounds (2806 cm-1) are investigated here to study how the
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products of cellulose, PP and their mixture change along with the increasing of the
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pyrolysis temperature, which is one of the evidence of pyrolysis evolvement.
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Products from Cellulose: According to Figure 3a, the main products of pyrolysis
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of cellulose are carbonyl compounds, carboxylic compounds, alcohols, furans,
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hydrocarbons, CO and CO2. The peak appears at 354oC, which is consistent with the
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TGA result (3.1 TG and DTG analysis). The height of the peak of CO2 is half of that
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of carbonyl compound. For the results of the cellulose with MCM-41, the catalyst
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does not change the type of the products (Figure 3b). The yield of carboxylic
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compounds is promoted in the main peak. Notably, there is still a lot of CO2 produced
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in the higher temperature period (Figure 3b). It suggests the MCM-41 promotes the
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decarboxylation and results in producing more carboxylic compounds and CO2 in a
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very broad temperature range (300-700 oC).
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Products from PP: The product of PP is much simpler than that of cellulose,
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which has only one neat peak of hydrocarbon compounds at 2806 cm-1 (Figure 4).
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The peak of the hydrocarbon compounds appear at 483 oC without MCM-41, and at
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392 oC with MCM-41. The height of the latter one is higher. That means the MCM-41
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catalyze the decomposition of PP at lower temperature and produce more hydrocarbon.
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Elena et al. reported the FTIR spectra of pyrolysis of the PP under 315 oC, 360 oC and
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465 oC. They also found the decomposition of the PP is prevailing at 465 oC. 29
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Products from Mixture of cellulose and PP: The pyrolysis products of mixture of
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cellulose and PP changing following the pyrolysis temperature are shown as Figure 5a
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(without MCM-41) and Figure 5b (with MCM-41). According to Figure 5, there are
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mainly two peaks for the mixture. The first peak, including carbonyls, carboxyls,
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alcohols, furans, hydrocarbons, CO and CO2, is at 350 oC, which mainly come from
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decomposition of cellulose. While the second peak happens at 479 oC, including
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mainly hydrocarbon produced from pyrolysis of PP. Notably, there are also CO and
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CO2 produced in the second peak, which is probably produced from the synergistic
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reaction between cellulose and PP by decarboxylation and decarbonylation. In the
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presence of MCM-41, the first peak is at 334 oC, which is a little lower than that of
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without MCM-41. Less carbonyls and more CO2 are produced when adding PP to the
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cellulose (Figure 5). The second peak is very low compared to the first peak, which is
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at 456 oC. The yield of hydrocarbon decrease obviously in the second peak. The
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results suggest the MCM-41 catalyst the decomposition of mixture of cellulose and
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PP at lower temperature and enhance the yield of carbonyls, carboxyls, alcohols and
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furans. Moreover, it also means the synergetic reaction between the cellulose and PP
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decomposition that enhances the deoxygenation reaction will be strengthened when
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providing MCM-41. More details of the production distribution will be discussed in
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the following Py-GC-MS results analysis.
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3.3 Products analysis by Py-GC/MS
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The GC-MS curves of the cellulose, PP and their mixture decomposes at 650 oC
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for 30s are shown as Figure 6 and Figure 7. According to related researches, 19-20, 25,
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34-35
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PP and their mixture is shown as Table 3 and Table 4. About one hundred compounds
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were analyzed here. They were divided into alkenes, olefins, aromatics, oxygenated
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groups first. Then the remaining compounds are put to the “else” group. More
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information is in the supplementary data.
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3.3.1 Cellulose, PP and their mixture without catalyst MCM-41
NIST and Wiley library, the main identified pyrolysis products of the cellulose,
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The main pyrolysis product of cellulose is oxygenated chemicals, which takes up
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90.4% of all the products (Table 3). Wherein, carbohydrate is the maximum product,
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which accounts for 85.7% of all the products. The rest are ketones, alcohols, acids,
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esters and epoxides, which takes up 2.0%, 1.5%, 0.42%, 0.70% and 0.07%,
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respectively (Table 4). Furthermore, 1, 6-anhydro-Beta-D-glucopyranose is the main
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monomer product of pyrolysis of cellulose, which accounts for 84.4% of all the
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products (supplementary data). For the PP, olefins, aromatics and alkanes are the main
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products, which account for 49.2%, 12.5% and 2.7%, respectively (Table 3). When
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adding PP to the cellulose, though the C/H eff increases from 0 to be 1.3, the
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oxygenated chemicals only decrease from 90.4% to 82.2%, which is much higher the
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calculated value.
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The calculated value is obtained from Eq. (2), Calculated value = 50%*Cellulose Value+ 50%*PP Value
(2)
In Eq. (2), Cellulose Value is the yield when using pure cellulose, and PP Value is the yield when using pure PP. Furthermore, according to the distribution of the oxygenated chemicals (Table 4),
308
the adding of the PP does not change the products significantly. It means the simple
309
mixing is not able to improve the products as expected. The FTIR data also show the
310
consistent results (3.2.1 Products from pyrolysis of cellulose, PP and their mixture).
311
Similar results have been reported by other researchers.19
312
3.3.2 Cellulose, PP and their mixture, with catalyst MCM-41
313 314
When put catalyst MCM-41 in the sample, the pyrolysis products of cellulose, PP and their mixture changed significantly.
315
According to Figure 8, oxygenated chemicals are still the main products of
316
pyrolysis of cellulose together with MCM-41, which account for 57.2% of all the
317
products. However, the distribution of the oxygenated chemicals changes significantly.
318
First, the saccharides decrease sharply from 85.7% to 10.1%. Besides, remarkable
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amount (34.9%) of furans are produced. It suggests the MCM-41 promotes the
320
opening ring reaction of the saccharides, which also results in the increase of other
321
oxygenated chemicals like alcohol, acid, esters, ketone and epoxides (Table 4). In
322
addition, compared to the pure cellulose, other products of high value like aromatics,
323
olefins and alkanes also increase significantly, which take up 15.7%, 4.9%, and 0.52%
324
of all the products, respectively. This result is also consistent with the front FTIR
325
result, where C=C increases significantly.
326
As for the PP and MCM-41, the olefins and aromatics are the main products,
327
which accounts for 36.2% and 34.0% of all the products. Compared to the pure PP,
328
more aromatics and less olefins are produced, which means the MCM-41 motivates
329
the cyclization of the olefins or other product to form aromatics.
330
When mixing PP with cellulose together with MCM-41, the pyrolysis products
331
change significantly. The oxygenated chemicals reduce significantly from 57.2% to
332
23.7%, while the olefins increase from 4.9% to 43.9%. And the yield of aromatic
333
hydrocarbons and alkanes are 17.8% and 2.4%. Compared to the calculated value, the
334
mixture of cellulose and PP co-pyrolysis with MCM-41 strengthens the conversion of
335
oxygenated chemicals to olefins, which notes a very significant synergism. Besides,
336
the yield of “else” group reduces significantly to be half of the calculated value,
337
which means the reactions are directed positively in some extent with the presence of
338
MCM-41. Y.-H. Lin also found the MCM-41 helps to produce more olefinic products.
339
20
340
lot (Table 4 and Figure 9). First, the saccharides continue decreasing from 10.1% to
In addition, the distribution of the produced oxygenated chemicals also improve a
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341
4.9%. Second, the furan reduces from 34.9% to 3.5%, while the alcohol increases
342
from 7.5% to 49.3%. Third, the esters, which will improve the stability of the oil, also
343
increase from 9.5% to 17.5%. It suggests the addition of PP promotes the reactions,
344
which produce non-cyclic chemicals like alcohols, aldehydes and esters instead of
345
cyclic chemicals like furans, epoxide and phenol. Deepak, et al (2015) also reported
346
the alcohol was one of the cellulose-PP interaction product, which is involving
347
hydroxyl radical abstraction from cellulose, chain fission, β-scission and
348
intramolecular hydrogen abstraction from PP. 19 The other synthesis pathway is
349
involved by the hydrocarbon pool mechanism, where the furans will be consumed and
350
olefins will be produced. 8-9
351
3.3.3 Proposed reaction pathway
352
As shown as Figure 10, after taking all the results of TG-FTIR and GC-MS into
353
consideration, the possible reaction pathway of the co-pyrolysis of cellulose and PP
354
together with MCM-41 is summarized. The products are formed through series of
355
complicated reactions, which can be classified into three types, including
356
decomposition of cellulose, decomposition of PP, and intermolecular reactions
357
between cellulose, PP and their intermediate products. The well-known reaction
358
mechanisms, such as radical reaction mechanism, hydrocarbon pool, carbenium ion
359
reaction, β-scission and Diels-Alder reaction, 9-10, 36-37 will be involved during the
360
catalytic pyrolysis process with MCM-41.
361
The main product of pyrolysis of cellulose is oxygenated chemicals, where
362
saccharides occupied 85.6% of all identified oxygenated products (Table 4), which
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was marked as path 1 in Figure 1016. While olefins, aromatics and alkanes are the
364
main products of decomposition of PP (path 6, 7, 8). 17, 25, 36 When simply mixing the
365
cellulose and PP without catalysts, there is no significant synergism between the
366
pyrolysis, which still mainly produces saccharides, olefins, aromatics and alkanes.
367
However, the adding of MCM-41 change the products significantly. Pyrolysis of
368
cellulose together with MCM-41 produces olefins, aromatics and alkanes, apart from
369
oxygenated chemicals (path 9 and path 11). 35-36 Furthermore, the furans are the major
370
products of oxygenated chemicals. It suggests the path 1 is restrained while the path 2
371
is strengthened. For the PP together with MCM-41, the catalyst strengthen the
372
reaction to form more aromatics (path 8).
373
Notably, olefins will be the major product of co-pyrolysis of cellulose and PP
374
together with MCM-41. At the same time, alcohols become the main product of the
375
oxygenated chemicals. It shows the path 3, 4, 5, 9 and 10 are strengthened, which are
376
mainly the synergetic reactions between cellulose and PP. Path 3, 4 and 5 describe the
377
radical from cracking of PP combines with the hydroxyl radical produced from
378
decomposition of cellulose (Figure 10). 19, 36 Path 9 is the cross reaction (carbenium
379
ion reaction and β-scission) between the intermediate products of the cellulose.17 And
380
Path 10 is the cross reaction of intermediate product of cellulose and PP based on the
381
hydrocarbon pool mechanism. 1-2, 8-9, 17, 36
382
However, different from the HZSM-5, the yield of aromatic compounds is less
383
than the calculated value. Shantanu Kelkar(2015) also reported mesoporous catalyst,
384
which lacks of microporous and macroporous structure, will reduce the yield of
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385
aromatic compounds. 35 It also suggests the mechanism of the co-pyrolysis in presence
386
of MCM-41 is different from that with HZSM-5. It is believed that all-silica MCM-41
387
catalyst has no acidic sites, while HZSM-5 has both weak acid site and strong acid
388
site, which can promote the yield of aromatic compounds. In this study, all-silica
389
MCM-41 shows large surface area (756 m2/g) because of mesoporous structures, and
390
the average pore size was 3.2 nm, which partly compensates its weaker acid property.
391
12, 30
392
products to produce more olefinic products. Besides, the MCM-41 may help cellulose
393
produce more free radical and motivate the chain end scission of PP to produce more
394
olefin.
395
4. Conclusion
The MCM-41 may strengthens the β-scission of cellulose, PP and their primary
396
The co-pyrolysis of cellulose and PP in the presence of MCM-41 was studied
397
using TG-FTIR and Py-GC/MS in this paper. All the TG, FTIR and Py-GC-MS data
398
show there is no significant synergism between the cellulose and PP when simply
399
mixing them, though the C/H eff of the mixture increases to be 1.3. However, the
400
adding of MCM-41 bring significant synergism. The TG and DTG data show the
401
co-pyrolysis with MCM-41 shifts the decomposition of PP to lower temperature,
402
which provides more overlap between cellulose and PP. According to the FTIR
403
spectra, there are also CO, CO2 and carbonyl produced in the second peak (mainly
404
from PP) for the mixture together with MCM-41, which indicates the intermolecular
405
synergetic reaction. Furthermore, the results from Py-GC/MS show olefins, aromatic
406
and oxygenated compounds (mainly alcohols) are the main products of co-pyrolysis
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407
of cellulose and PP in the presence of MCM-41. The olefins and alcohols are much
408
more than the calculated value, which are the main result of synergism. The alcohols
409
are mainly produced from the radical from cracking of PP combines with the hydroxyl
410
radical produced from decomposition of cellulose. While the olefins are produced
411
from interaction reaction (carbenium ion reaction and β-scission) between the primary
412
products of the cellulose and hydrocarbon pool reaction of primary products of
413
cellulose and PP.
414
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415
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Table 1 Characteristic pyrolysis parameters of cellulose, PP and their mixture Decomposition
Weight loss ratio
Max mass loss
temperature range/°C
/ wt%
temperature/°C
Cell
300-388
80.7
354
Cell-MCM-41
302-392
52.2
347
PP
411 -501
95.9
473
PP-MCM-41
277-491
100.0
387
Cell-PP
306-370, 419-505
28.5, 60.7
350, 475
Cell-PP-MCM-41
302-387, 407-506
36.0, 50.2
347, 456
Feedstock
416 417
Table 2 Wavenumber to compounds of the pyrolysis products of cellulose, PP and
418
their mixture Wavenumber/cm-1
Compounds
3350~4000, 1260~2059
H2 O
2275~2390
CO2
2048~2143~2238
CO
1625~1858
Carbonyls
2666~3060
hydrocarbon
1067~1110
alcohols
1184
Carboxyl
747
furans
2848,2881,2918,2963,1375,1462
alkane
891,968,1648,3081
alkene
419 420
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421 422
Table 3 Main products from pyrolysis of cellulose, PP and their mixture at 650 oC for
423
30s (GC-MS)
424
Feedstock /% Cell Cell-MCM-41 Cell/PP Cell/PP-MCM-41 PP PP-MCM-41
H/C eff 0 0 1.3 1.3 2.0 2.0
Oxygenated 90.4 57.2 82.2 24.8 0 0
Olefins 0 4.9 4.7 43.9 49.2 36.2
Aromatics 0 15.7 1.1 17.8 12.5 34.0
Alkanes 0 0.52 0 2.4 2.7 5.4
Else 9.6 21.7 12.0 11.1 35.6 24.5
425 426
Table 4 Oxygenated chemicals of products from pyrolysis of cellulose, PP and their
427
mixture at 650 oC for 30s (GC-MS)
428
Feedstock /% H/C eff Alcohol Furans Acids Esters Saccharides Ketone Phenol Epoxide
Cell 0 1.5 0 0.42 0.70 85.7 2.0 0 0.07
Cell-MCM-41 0 7.5 34.9 5.8 9.5 10.1 17.9 4.1 10.0
Cell/PP 1.3 0.87 0 0.04 0.15 80.6 0.45 0.08 0.01
429 430
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Cell/PP-MCM-41 1.3 49.3 3.5 6.2 17.5 4.9 13.9 0 0
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100
80
TG/%
60
40
Cell Cell/MCM-41 PP PP/MCM-41 Cell-PP Cell/PP/MCM-41
20
0 200
400
431
T/
432
(a)
600
0
DTG(%/min)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
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-20
-40
Cell Cell/MCM-41 PP PP/MCM-41 Cell-PP Cell/PP/MCM--41
-60 200
400
433
T/
434
(b)
600
435
Figure 1 TG (a) and DTG (b) curve of pyrolysis of Cellulose, PP and their mixture
436
(mass ratio= 1:1) with MCM-41 (MCM-41 to sample mass ratio=10:1)
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0.5
Cell Cell/MCM-41 Cel/PP Cel/PP/MCM-41
A/a.u.
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
3500
4000
3500
4000
Wavenumber/cm-1
437 438
(a) First mass loss peak PP PP/MCM-41 PP/Cell PP/Cel/MCM-41
2.0
1.5
A/a.u.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
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1.0
0.5
0.0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
Wavenumber/cm-1
439 440
(b) Second mass loss peak
441
Figure 2 FTIR spectra of the first (a) and second (b) mass loss peak of pyrolysis of
442
cellulose, cellulose/MCM-41 (1:10), PP, PP/MCM-41 (1:10), cellulose/PP (1:1) and
443
cellulose/PP/MCM-41 (0.5:0.5:10),herein the absorbance value of mixture is adjusted
444
using pure cellulose or PP.
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0.10
furans alcohols carboxyls carbonyls CO CO2
Absorbtion /a.u.
0.08
0.06
hydrocarbon 0.04
0.02
0.00 200
400
600
800
o
Temperature / C
445 446
(a) Cellulose furans alcohols carboxyls carbonyls CO CO2
0.02
Absorbtion /a.u.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
Page 24 of 34
hydrocarbon
0.01
0.00
200 447 448
400
600
800
o
Temperature / C (b) m(Cellulose)/m(MCM-41) =1:10
449
Figure 3 FTIR spectra of the main products (furans, alcohols, carboxyls, carbonyls,
450
CO, CO2 and hydrocarbon) of cellulose (a) and cellulose/MCM-41 (b) along with
451
increasing of the pyrolysis temperature
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0.20 0.15
PP/MCM-41 PP
0.10
A/a.u.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
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0.05 0.00 -0.05 -0.10 200
400
600
800
Temperature/
452 453
Figure 4 FTIR spectra of the products (hydrocarbon compounds) of PP along with
454
increasing of the pyrolysis temperature
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0.10
Absorbtion /a.u.
0.08 0.06 0.04
furans alcohols carboxyls carbonyls CO CO2 hydrocarbon
0.02 0.00 -0.02 200
400
600
800
o
455
Temperature / C
456
(a) m(cellulose)/m(PP)=1:1
0.0100 furans alcohols carboxyls carbonyls CO CO2
0.0075
Absorbtion /a.u.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
Page 26 of 34
0.0050
hydrocarbon
0.0025
0.0000
200
600
800
o
Temperature / C
457 458
400
(b) m(cellulose)/m(PP)/m(MCM-41) =0.5:0.5:10
459
Figure 5 FTIR spectra of the main products (furans, alcohols, carboxyls, carbonyls,
460
CO, CO2 and hydrocarbon) of the mixture (cellulose and PP) along with increasing of
461
the pyrolysis temperature
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9
1.4x10
Relative Abundance
cellulose
9
1.2x10
9
1.0x10
8
8.0x10
8
6.0x10
8
4.0x10
8
2.0x10
0.0 5
10
15
25
30
35
Time (min)
462 463
20
Figure 6 GC-MS data of products from pyrolysis of cellulose at 650 oC for 30s 9
4.70x10
9
3.76x10
9
2.82x10
9
1.88x10
8
Relative Abundance
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
Energy & Fuels
9.40x10
c b a 5
464
10
15
20
25
30
35
Time (min)
465
Figure 7 GC-MS data of products from pyrolysis of (a) cellulose/MCM-41(mass
466
ratio= 1:10), (b) PP/MCM-41(mass ratio= 1:10) and (c) Cellulose/PP/MCM-41 (mass
467
ratio= 1:1:20) at 650 oC for 30s
468
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60
cellulose/MCM-41 PP/MCM-41 cellulose/PP/MCM-41 calculated value
Area (%)
50 40 30 20 10 0 469
alkanes
olefins
aromatics oxygenated
else
470
Figure 8 Distribution of the products pyrolysis from cellulose/MCM-41, PP/MCM-41
471
and Cellulose/PP/MCM-41, herein calculated value is equal to 50% of the cellulose
472
value plus 50% of the PP value 50
cellulose/MCM-41 cellulose/PP/MCM-41
40
Selection (%)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
Page 28 of 34
30
20
10
0
e 473
x id po
e
s l l e s es rs ide an no ids ster on ho d r r t e c e y o a u e h a f h e k ph eh et alc cc ald sa
474
Figure 9 Distribution of the oxygenated chemicals from cellulose/MCM-41 and
475
Cellulose/PP/MCM-41
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476 477
Figure 10 Reaction pathway of co-pyrolysis of cellulose and PP together with
478
MCM-41
479
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480 481 482
Acknowledgments
483
The authors gratefully acknowledge the funding support by the National Natural
484
Science Foundation of China (No.51576111),and the National Key Research Program
485
(No. 2016YFE0102500).
486
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Supporting Information: 1. Table S1 Main identified products from pyrolysis of cellulose at 650 oC for 30s (GC-MS) 2. Table S2 Main identified products from pyrolysis of cellulose, PP and their mixture together with catalyst at 650 oC for 30s (GC-MS) 3. Table S3 All the peaks from pyrolysis of cellulose, PP and Cellulose/PP at 650 oC for 30s (GC-MS) 4. Table S4 All the peaks from pyrolysis of cellulose/MCM-41, PP/MCM-41 and Cellulose/PP/MCM-41 at 650 oC for 30s (GC-MS)
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