Abstract

In order to investigate the effects of temperature and ion-exchanged metals on brown coal tar composition, we have pyrolyzed raw, acid-washed, sodium-exchanged, and calcium-exchanged Yallourn brown coal in a fluidized-bed reactor at temperatures of 600–1000°C. Tar yiels adhere to the order: acid-washed > raw > Na-form > Ca-form-reflecting the cations' ability to bring about a more rigid and compact coal structure, which hinders the escape of large tar molecules evolved during coal develatilization. Analysis of the tars by high-pressure liquid chromatography with ultraviolet-visible diode-array detection reveals that the tars are composed mainly of aliphatic species at the lowest pyrolysis temperatures. An increase in pyrolysis temperature brings about a decrease in the aliphatic components and an increase in the aromatic portion of the tar. At low temperatures, the aromatic portion of the tar is composed of a large number of mostly substituted aromatic species. The distribution of products narrows, however, as pyrolysis temperature is raised and dealkylation and decarbonylation reactions take place. Concurrently, the contribution from ring-nitrogen-containing aromatics falls, in accordance with their lower relative thermal stability. At the highest pyrolysis temperatures, tar composition is dominated by unsubstituted polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Compared to temperature, sodium and calcium exhibit only modest effects on tar composition—the primary one being the suppression of the yield of aromatics containing ring nitrogen. At the lower pyrolysis temperatures, the tars from the Ca-form coal are richer in aliphatic content than the tars from the other coals, suggesting that the aliphatic products of devolatilization are less susceptible than the aromatic products to the cation-induced hindrance of tar molecule escape during coal pyrolysis. The effects of the metals become less pronounced at higher pyrolysis temperatures, however, where thermal factors govern the product distribution.

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