Abstract

To investigate the nitrogen migration and transformation mechanisms that produce high value-added N-containing chemicals, the NH3/N2 torrefaction pretreatments of waste biomass for the production of renewable N-containing compounds were explored, and the effects of torrefaction temperature (200, 225, 250, 275, 300 °C) on fuel properties, structure, crystallinity, surface functional groups and thermal kinetics were evaluated by element analysis, X-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), fourier infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and thermogravimetric analysis (TG-DTG). The effects of subsequent catalytic ammonization pyrolysis upgrading of the torrefied biomass with Co/HZSM-5/HZSM-5 catalysts under an NH3/N2 atmosphere on product yield and N-containing compound selectivity were also evaluated with GC/MS and UV-fluorescence spectrometry. Furthermore, nitrogen fixation and migration mechanisms were also proposed in depth. The results showed that NH3 torrefaction was more effective in enhancing N fixation and retarding the release of N-containing volatiles in torrefied biochar (0.26%–9.43%) and reducing the oxygen content (43.18%–21.81%) via Maillard reactions compared with N2 torrefaction. With increasing torrefaction severity, the N-containing compound content, higher heating values (HHV), deoxygenation ratio (DEO) and nitrogen-doping ratio (NDR) increased, which were much higher than those of conventional N2 torrefaction. Higher temperatures promoted the evolution of graphitic-N and oxidized-N and reduced pyrrolic-N and pyridinic-N group formation in torrefied biochar. The maximum content of N-containing compounds of 88.71% was obtained at a torrefaction temperature of 275 °C under NH3 pyrolysis coupled with the Co/HZSM-5 catalyst, and was achieved via substrate interaction with the -Co-O-Si- catalyst sites and Maillard reactions. Furthermore, the N2 atmosphere combined with the HZSM-5 catalyst significantly promoted the conversion of HC compounds (∼56.97% at 225 °C during N2 torrefaction), while the Co/HZSM-5 catalyst combined with the NH3 atmosphere significantly improved N-containing compound formation. NH3 pyrolysis facilitated the formation of pyrroles and pyrazines while reducing the formation of amides by deamination and dehydrogenation reactions. Cellulose was conducive to the transformation of pyrrole in NH3 pyrolysis, while lignin was conducive to the formation of aniline. These results could offer strategies to regulate nitrogen functional groups to enhance N-containing chemicals.

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