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Download fileInfluence of Crystal Allomorph and Crystallinity on the Products and Behavior of Cellulose during Fast Pyrolysis
journal contribution
posted on 2016-07-19, 00:00 authored by Calvin Mukarakate, Ashutosh Mittal, Peter
N. Ciesielski, Sridhar Budhi, Logan Thompson, Kristiina Iisa, Mark R. Nimlos, Bryon S. DonohoeCellulose is the primary biopolymer
responsible for maintaining
the structural and mechanical integrity of cell walls and, during
the fast pyrolysis of biomass, may be restricting cell wall expansion
and inhibiting phase transitions that would otherwise facilitate efficient
escape of pyrolysis products. Here, we test whether modifications
in two physical properties of cellulose, its crystalline allomorph
and degree of crystallinity, alter its performance during fast pyrolysis.
We show that both crystal allomorph and relative crystallinity of
cellulose impact the slate of primary products produced by fast pyrolysis.
For both cellulose-I and cellulose-II, changes in crystallinity dramatically
impact the fast pyrolysis product portfolio. In both cases, only the
most highly crystalline samples produced vapors dominated by levoglucosan.
Cellulose-III, on the other hand, produces largely the same slate
of products regardless of its relative crystallinity and produced
as much or more levoglucosan at all crystallinity levels compared
to cellulose-I or II. In addition to changes in products, the different
cellulose allomorphs affected the viscoelastic properties of cellulose
during rapid heating. Real-time hot-stage pyrolysis was used to visualize
the transition of the solid material through a molten phase and particle
shrinkage. SEM analysis of the chars revealed additional differences
in viscoelastic properties and molten phase behavior impacted by cellulose
crystallinity and allomorph. Regardless of relative crystallinity,
the cellulose-III samples displayed the most obvious evidence of having
transitioned through a molten phase.