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Effect of Pyrolysis Temperature on PhysicoChemical Properties and Acoustic-Based Amination of Biochar for Efficient CO2 Adsorption

Authors :
Daniell L. Mattern
Nathan I. Hammer
Baharak Sajjadi
Riya Chatterjee
Austin Dorris
Vijayasankar Raman
Wei-Yin Chen
Source :
Frontiers in Energy Research, Vol 8 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2020.

Abstract

The present study examined the effect of pyrolysis temperature on the physicochemical properties of biochar, activation process and carbon capture. Two different categories of biochars were synthesized from herbaceous (miscanthus and switchgrass) or agro-industrial (corn stover and sugarcane bagasse) feedstock under four different pyrolysis temperatures- 500, 600, 700 and 800 oC. The synthesized biochars underwent sono-amination activation comprising low-frequency acoustic treatment followed by amine functionalization to prepare adsorbents for CO2 capture. As per the elemental analysis, the elevated pyrolysis temperature resulted in increased %C and %ash contents and reduced %N contents of biochar. The textural analysis exhibited almost 3-times enhancement of micro surface area and pore volume upon increasing the pyrolysis temperature from 500 to 700 oC, though further increase to 800 oC reduced the micro-porosity and the surface area. The intermediate temperatures of 600 and 700 oC revealed the highest interactions with ultrasound-amination, which significantly intensified CO2 adsorption. Accordingly, the CO2 capture capacity of sono-aminated biochars synthesized at 600 and 700 oC were almost 200% greater than that of raw biochars. There were 127-159% and 115-151% increases in adsorption capacity of biochars synthesized at 800 and 500 oC upon ultrasono-amine functionalization. Miscanthus biochar synthesized at 700 oC and treated sono-chemically demonstrated the highest adsorption ability of 2.89 mmol/g at 70 oC and 0.10 atm partial pressure, which is 211% higher than its pristine condition. The superior adsorption capacity of miscanthus (at 700 oC) can be attributed to its large surface area (324.35 m2/g), high carbon content (84%), and low ash content (4.9%), as well as its %N content after sono-amination that was twice that of raw char.

Details

Language :
English
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in Energy Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0b8dbb3fca96c5599d2002526e14f26d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fenrg.2020.00085/full