Abstract

Co-pyrolysis of plastics and biomass is a promising solution for waste management and renewable energy utilization. There is still no consensus on the distributions of co-pyrolysis products and the reaction mechanisms between the polyethylene (PE) plastics and biomass components at the molecular level. In this work, the product distribution, co-pyrolysis mechanism, and electronic characteristic of PE and major biomass components such as cellulose (CE), hemicellulose (HC), and lignin (LG) were investigated at the atomistic level using reactive force field simulation and density functional theory computation. The co-pyrolysis of PE and biomass facilitates the release of non-carbon radicals, which enhances the reactivity of macromolecular fractions to high-quality oils. HC promotes the char degradation and oxygenated oil retention, whereas CE accelerates the decomposition of oxygen-free char to light hydrocarbons and inorganic gases. LG inhibits the conversion of oxygenated oil to CO/CO2 and retards the secondary cracking of oxygen-free oil. Alkyne is mostly generated from α-O-4 LG dimer, whereas olefin is mainly derived from γ-O-4 LG dimer. β-O-4 LG dimer accelerates the conversion of char to oil, while it decreases gas emissions. The electronic characteristics such as the Fukui function, frontier orbitals, and total electron density demonstrate the reaction sites of biomass monomers. For CE and HC, the hydroxyl groups on methylene are the nucleophilic sites, and the O atoms of hydroxyl on the pyran ring are prone to the electrophilic attack by PE. Except for O atoms in LG dimers, the unsubstituted C atoms on the benzene ring are inclined to the nucleophilic sites, whereas the C and para-C atoms located at hydroxyl and methoxy are susceptible to the electrophilic attack by PE. This work elucidates the differences in the co-pyrolysis reaction characteristics of various biomass structures, which provides scientific and theoretical guidance for the efficient resource exploitation of biomass and waste plastics.

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