Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10393295 | Thermochimica Acta | 2005 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Thermogravimetric data on the devolatilization rate of beech wood are re-examined with the aim of incorporating the effects of high heating rates (up to 108Â KÂ minâ1) in the global kinetics. The mechanism consisting of three independent parallel reactions, first-order in the amount of volatiles released from pseudo-components with chief contributions from hemicellulose, cellulose and lignin, is considered first. It is found that the set of activation energies estimated by Gronli et al. [M.G. Gronli, G. Varhegyi, C. Di Blasi, Ind. Eng. Chem. Res. 41 (2002) 4201-4208] (100, 236 and 46Â kJÂ molâ1, respectively) for one slow heating rate results in very high deviations between predicted and measured rate curves. The agreement is significantly improved by a new set of data consisting of activation energies of 147, 193 and 181Â kJÂ molâ1, respectively. In this case, the overlap is reduced between the reaction rates of the three pseudo-components whose chemical composition is also modified. In particular, instead of a slow decomposition rate over a broad range of temperatures, the activity of the third reaction is mainly explicated along the high-temperature (tail) region of the weight loss curves. The performances of more simplified mechanisms are also evaluated. One-step mechanisms, using literature values for the kinetic constants, produce large errors on either the conversion time (activation energy of 103Â kJÂ molâ1) or the maximum devolatilization rate (activation energy of 149Â kJÂ molâ1). On the other hand, these parameters are well predicted by two parallel reactions, with activation energies of 147 and 149Â kJÂ molâ1.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
Authors
Carmen Branca, Alessandro Albano, Colomba Di Blasi,