posted on 2017-01-03, 00:00authored byGary S. Groenewold, Kristyn M. Johnson, S. Carter Fox, Cathy Rae, Christopher A. Zarzana, Bethany R. Kersten, Salene M. Rowe, Tyler L. Westover, Garold L. Gresham, Rachel M. Emerson, Amber N. Hoover
Accurate measurement
of biomass pyrolysis products can provide
valuable guidance for thermal processing. However, pyrolysis generates
large numbers of compounds in varying concentrations, factors that
can make compound identification and quantitation difficult. In this
study, Miscanthus biomass samples were analyzed using
pyrolysis/two-dimensional gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (Py-GCxGC-MS),
which provided a more comprehensive chromatographic separation and
mass spectral compound identification. Quantitative measurement was
performed for 34 calibrated pyrolysis compounds using an internal
standard method. Pyrolysis efficiency was measured as a function of
sample mass, pyrolysis temperature, and pyrolysis temperature ramp
rate. For most of the calibrated pyrolysis products, production efficiency
decreased with sample mass, increased with pyrolysis temperature,
and decreased with pyrolysis temperature ramp rate. Significantly,
the temperature profiles of the different pyrolysis products were
variable, notably acetic acid and the vinyl and formyl derivatives
of phenol and guaiacol, which were produced at lower temperatures
compared to other compounds such as the syringyl derivatives and levoglucosan.
Lignol ratios were compared with those generated using 1H/13C heteronuclear single quantum coherence (HSQC) nuclear
magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR). Lower fractions of syringyl-
and guaiacyl-lignols and higher fractions of the phenol-lignols were
generated by Py-GCxGC-MS compared to HSQC-NMR.