Abstract

AbstractA chain growth model for heterogeneous secondary reactions is developed for the pyrolysis of large wood particles and the parameters determined by nonlinear optimization. The model takes both the volatile retention time and cracking and repolymerization reactions of the vapours with the decomposing solid as well as sutocatalysis into consideration. The extent of the secondary reactions is strongly influenced by the time and the ratio of the autocatalytic (propagation) reaction rate to noncatalytic (initiation) reaction rate. The wood which has a higher value of the autocatalytic/noncatalytic ratio also has a higher exothermic heat of reaction and yields a higher amount of final char residue. This fact confirms the heterogeneous secondary reactions lead to carbon enrichment of the final residue and are accompanied with an exothermic heat of reaction. The lower activation energies of the initiation and propagation reactions as compared to primary reactions (competitive reaction model consisting of weight loss and char forming reactions) confirm autocatalysis in large particles. The sealed reactor studies of small quantities of fine wood samples show that heterogeneous secondary reactions and not lower heating rates in large particles are the main source of char formed during the thermal decomposition of large wood particles. The model predictions are in agreement with the weight loss and temperature versus time curves over a wide range of particle size and furnace temperatures.

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