Abstract

Rapid pyrolysis of 6 biomass/coal blends (1:4, wt) including rice straw + bituminous (RS + B), rice straw + anthracite (RS + A), chinar leaves + bituminous (CL + B), chinar leaves + anthracite (CL + A), pine sawdust + bituminous (PS + B), and pine sawdust + anthracite (PS + A) was carried out in a high-frequency magnetic field based furnace at 600–1200 °C. The reactor could not only achieve high heating rates of fuel samples but also make biomass and coal particles contact well; secondary reactions of primary products during rapid pyrolysis can also be efficiently reduced. By comparing nitrogen distributions in products of blends (experimental values) with those of the sums of individual biomass and coal (weighted values), nitrogen conversion characteristics under rapid pyrolysis of biomass/coal blends were investigated. Results show that, biomass particles in blends lead to higher experimental char-N yields than the weighted values during rapid pyrolysis of biomass/anthracite blends. The decreased heating rates of both biomass and coal particles caused by the low packing densities of biomass may be the reason. For blends of CL + B in which packing density of chinar leaves is high, and for PS + B during pyrolysis of which melting and shrinkage happen to pine sawdust, both biomass and coal particles can obtain high heating rates, synergies can be found to promote nitrogen release from fuel samples and decrease char-N yields under all the conditions. But the low fluidity and not easily collapsed carbon skeletons of rice straw make the heating rates of rice straw and bituminous particles in RS + B lower than those of CL + B and PS + B, and weaker synergies can be found from char-N yields of RS + B. The synergies can obviously be found to decrease the (NH 3 + HCN)-N yields and make more nitrogen convert to N 2 except for those of several low-temperature conditions (600–700 °C). Under the low-temperature (600–700 °C) condition, synergies make molar ratios of HCN-N/NH 3-N higher than those of the weighted values.

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