首页 | 主题 | 图库 | 问答 | 文摘 | 原创 | 百科

历史 | 地理 | 人物 | 艺术 | 体育 | 科学 | 音乐 | 电影 | 信息技术 | 世界遗产

 开放、中立,源自维基百科

Personal tools

Pyrolysis

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  (Redirected from Bio-oil)
Jump to: navigation, search
Simple sketch of pyrolysis chemistry
Simple sketch of pyrolysis chemistry

Pyrolysis is the chemical decomposition of organic materials by heating in the absence of oxygen or any other reagents, except possibly steam.

It is used in chemical analysis to break down complex matter into simpler molecules for identification, for example by pyrolysis gas chromatography mass spectrometry.

In industry, it may be used to convert one single chemical; for example, ethylene dichloride is pyrolysed to polyvinyl chloride to make PVC. It may also be used to convert complex materials such as biomass or waste into substances that are either desirable or less harmful (e.g. - syngas).

Extreme pyrolysis, which leaves only carbon as the residue, is called carbonization. Pyrolysis is a special case of thermolysis.

Contents

Anhydrous pyrolysis

Some pyrolysis processes are anhydrous (without water).

This phenomenon commonly occurs whenever solid organic material is heated strongly in absence of oxygen, e.g., when frying, roasting, baking, toasting. Even though such processes are carried out in a normal atmosphere, the outer layers of the material keep its interior oxygen-free (which is why the outer layer oxidizes (burns), but the inside does not).

The process also occurs when burning compact solid fuel, like wood. In fact, the flames of a wood fire are due to combustion of gases released by pyrolysis, not combustion of the wood itself. Thus, the pyrolysis of common materials like wood, plastic, and clothing is extremely important for fire safety and fire-fighting.

An ancient industrial use of anhydrous pyrolysis is the production of charcoal through the pyrolysis of wood. In more recent times, pyrolysis has been used on a massive scale to turn coal into coke for metallurgy, especially steelmaking.

Anhydrous pyrolysis has been assumed to take place during catagenesis, the conversion of kerogen to fossil fuels.

In many industrial applications, the process is done under pressure and at operating temperatures above 430 °C (806 °F). Anhydrous pyrolysis can also be used to produce liquid fuel similar to diesel from solid biomass or plastics.[1] The most common technique uses very low residence times (<2 seconds) and high heating rates using a temperature between 350 and 500 °C and is called either fast or flash pyrolysis.

Hydrous pyrolysis

Main article: Hydrous pyrolysis

The term pyrolysis is sometimes used to encompass thermolysis in the presence of water, such as steam cracking of oil, or more generally hydrous pyrolysis. An example of the latter is thermal depolymerization of organic waste into light crude oil.

Vacuum pyrolysis

In vacuum pyrolysis, organic material is heated in a vacuum in order to decrease boiling point and avoid adverse chemical reactions. It is used in organic chemistry as a synthetic tool. In flash vacuum thermolysis or FVT, the residence time of the substrate at the working temperature is limited as much as possible, again in order to minimize secondary reactions.

Processes for biomass pyrolysis

Fast pyrolysis of biomass feedstocks is required to achieve high yields of liquids. It is characterized by rapid heating of the biomass particles and a short residence time of product vapors (0.5 to 2 s). Rapid heating means that the biomass must be ground into fine particles and that the insulating char layer that forms at the surface of the reacting particles must be continuously removed.

Since pyrolysis is slightly endothermic,[2] various methods have been proposed to provide heat to the reacting biomass particles:

  • Partial combustion of the biomass products through air injection. This results in poor-quality products.
  • Direct heat transfer with a hot gas, ideally product gas that is reheated and recycled. The problem is to provide enough heat with reasonable gas flow-rates.
  • Indirect heat transfer with exchange surfaces (wall, tubes). It is difficult to achieve good heat transfer on both sides of the heat exchange surface.
  • Direct heat transfer with circulating solids: Solids transfer heat between a burner and a pyrolysis reactor. This is an effective but complex technology.

The following technologies have been proposed for biomass pyrolysis:

  • Fixed beds were used for the traditional production of charcoal. Poor, slow heat transfer resulted in very low liquid yields.
  • Augers: This technology is adapted from a Lurgi process for coal gasification. Hot sand and biomass particles are fed at one end of a screw. The screw mixes the sand and biomass and conveys them along. It provides a good control of the biomass residence time. It does not dilute the pyrolysis products with a carrier or fluidizing gas. However, sand must be reheated in a separate vessel, and mechanical reliability is a concern. There is no large-scale commercial implementation.
  • Ablative processes: Biomass particles are moved at high speed against a hot metal surface. Ablation of any char forming at the particles surface maintains a high rate of heat transfer. This can be achieved by using a metal surface spinning at high speed within a bed of biomass particles, which may present mechanical reliability problems but prevents any dilution of the products. As an alternative, the particles may be suspended in a carrier gas and introduced at high speed through a cyclone whose wall is heated; the products are diluted with the carrier gas.[3] A problem shared with all ablative processes is that scale-up is made difficult since the ratio of the wall surface to the reactor volume decreases as the reactor size is increased. There is no large-scale commercial implementation.
AD Links