Abstract

Lignin is the most difficult to be converted and most easy coking component in biomass catalytic pyrolysis to high-value liquid fuels and chemicals. Catalytic conversion of guaiacol as a lignin model compound was conducted in a fixed-bed reactor over ZSM-5 to investigate its conversion and coking behaviors. The effects of temperature, weight hourly space velocity (WHSV) and partial pressure on product distribution were studied. The results show the maximum aromatic carbon yield of 28.55% was obtained at temperature of 650 °C, WHSV of 8 h−1 and partial pressure of 2.38 kPa, while the coke carbon yield was 19.55%. The reaction pathway was speculated to be removing methoxy group to form phenols with further aromatization to form aromatics. The amount of coke increased with increasing reaction time. The surface area and acidity of catalysts declined as coke formed on the acid sites and blocked the pore channels, which led to the decrease of aromatic yields. Finally, a kinetic model of guaiacol catalytic conversion considering coke deposition was built based on the above reaction pathway to properly predict product distribution. The experimental and model predicting data agreed well. The correlation coefficient of all equations were all higher than 0.90.

Highlights

  • Some studies about lignin catalytic pyrolysis have been performed[24,25]

  • The products were grouped into five different groups: One carbon products (CH4/CO/CO2), olefins (C2–C4), aromatics, phenols and coke

  • It indicated that low temperature favored to the pyrolysis of guaiacol to phenols, while high temperature promoted the production of olefins and aromatics, and resulted in higher coke formation

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Summary

Introduction

Some studies about lignin catalytic pyrolysis have been performed[24,25]. the literatures involving detail mechanism features and coking characteristics are scarce. The coking rate for lignin catalytic pyrolysis is ten times more than that in MTO, the kinetic model for MTO is not suitable for the process.

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