화학공학소재연구정보센터
Energy & Fuels, Vol.16, No.6, 1405-1412, 2002
Pyrolysis of lignins: Experimental and kinetics studies
Lignins are generally used as a low grade fuel in the pulp and paper industry, In this work, pyrolysis of Alcell and Kraft lignins obtained from the Alcell process and Westvaco, respectively, was carried out in a fixed-bed reactor and in a thermogravimetric analyzer (TGA) using helium (13.4 mL/min/g of lignin) and nitrogen (50 mL/min/g of lignin), respectively. The reaction temperature was increased from 300 to 1073 K, while the heating rates were varied from 5 to 15 K/min. The gaseous products mainly consisted of H-2, CO, CO2, CH4, and C2+. With increase in heating rate from 5 to 15 K/min both lignin conversion and hydrogen production increased from 56 to 65 wt 1% and from 25 to 31 mol %, respectively for fixed-bed pyrolysis reaction of Alcell lignin at 1073 K, whereas at the same condition the conversion and hydrogen production increased from 52 to 57 wt % and from 30 to 43 mol % for Kraft lignin. The distributed activation energy model (DAEM) was used to analyze complex reactions involved in the lignin pyrolysis process. In this model, reactions are assumed to consist of a set of irreversible first-order reactions that have different activation energies. This model was used to calculate the activation energy, E, the distribution of activation energy f(E), and the frequency factor k(o) for the pyrolysis of Alcell and Kraft lignins in a thermogravimetric analyzer (TGA). For the pyrolysis in TGA, the activation energies for Kraft and Alcell lignins varied from 129 to 361 kJ/mol with maximum distribution at similar to250-270 kJ/mol and from 80 to 158 kJ/mol with maximum distribution at similar to118-125 kJ/ mol, respectively.