Abstract

Potassium is an inorganic mineral element in biomass and has a significant catalytic effect on biomass pyrolysis. In this work, the effect of potassium on the pyrolysis of biomass components (cellulose, xylan and lignin) was investigated with the help of thermogravimetric analyzer coupled to fourier transform infrared spectrometer (TG-FTIR) and pyrolysis–gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (Py-GC/MS). The results showed that potassium accelerated the start of the main pyrolysis stage of the biomass components, reduced the weight loss rate for cellulose and lignin, and increased the weight loss rate for xylan. On the other hand, potassium presented a promotion effect on the formation of char for cellulose but a suppression effect for lignin. In addition, an increasing potassium content promoted the release of volatile products for xylan. Product distribution analysis found that potassium promoted the scission of glycosidic bonds and the decomposition of glucose units, resulting in a sharp yield decrease of carbohydrates and a yield increase of furans, aldehydes and ketones. In addition, an increased production of CO2 was obtained, indicating that potassium favors the cleavage and reforming of carboxyl (COOH) and carbonyl (CO) groups. Furthermore, the effect of potassium on the pyrolysis of cellulose and xylan was stronger than that on lignin pyrolysis. The effect on the pyrolysis reaction also resulted in a higher activation energy for the decomposition of biomass components, especially at high temperature intervals. Moreover, the higher the content of potassium added, the greater the increase was in the activation energy.

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