4.8 Article

Products distribution and interaction mechanism during co-pyrolysis of rice husk and oily sludge by experiments and reaction force field simulation

Journal

BIORESOURCE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 329, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biortech.2021.124822

Keywords

Co-pyrolysis; Synergetic effect; Mechanism; ReaxFF MD; Rice husk; Oily sludge

Funding

  1. State Key Laboratory of Petroleum Pollution Control [PPC20180XX]
  2. CNPC Research Institute of Safety and Environmental Technology
  3. National Science and Technology Major Projects [2016ZX050040003]
  4. State Key Laboratory of Heavy Oil Processing in China University of Petroleum (East China)

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This study explored the co-pyrolysis behavior of rice husk and oily sludge through experiments and simulations, revealing a synergistic effect that led to the production of more bio-oil and low molecular weight molecules. The activation energy of both components was reduced during co-pyrolysis, and the mechanism of this synergistic effect was studied by analyzing free radical intermediates.
In this work, the co-pyrolysis behavior of rice husk (RH) and oily sludge (OS) was investigated by combining experiments and simulation. The thermogravimetric-derivative thermogravimetric (TG-DTG) and Reaction force field (ReaxFF MD) results indicate that synergetic effects exist in co-pyrolysis. Compared with the single component pyrolysis, the activation energy of RH and OS in co-pyrolysis was decreased by 15.97% and 17.14% shown by kinetic analysis, respectively. The Pyrolysis-gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (PY-GC/MS) experiments, and simulation products analysis reveal that more bio-oil and molecules with low molecular weight were produced during the co-pyrolysis process. The synergetic effect mechanism was studied by detecting the variation of free radical intermediates. The results show that hydroxyl radicals from RH pyrolysis reduced cracking temperature of OS, and the hydrogen radicals from OS pyrolysis increased the degree of ring-splitting of RH. The study explores an approach to identify the synergetic effect and reveal the mechanism of co-pyrolysis.

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