4.6 Article

State of Formic Acid Dissolved in Tar According to Infrared Spectroscopy

Journal

APPLIED SPECTROSCOPY
Volume 77, Issue 1, Pages 88-93

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/00037028221134118

Keywords

Tar; infrared spectroscopy; diffuse reflection infrared spectroscopy; formic acid

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The interaction between formic acid and tar was studied using infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy. The study found that formic acid existed in different forms in tar, which is significant for understanding the process of tar conversion into gasoline fractions in the presence of formic acid.
Formic acid is considered as a promising hydrogen carrier and can be used as a source of hydrogen in the processing of heavy oil fractions such as tar. The interaction of formic acid with tar was studied by infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy via special technique using a mirror substrate. The infrared (IR) spectra were interpreted considering density functional theory (DFT) calculations. It was shown that formic acid dissolved in tar in three forms, as dimers, monomers of cis- and trans-configurations, hydrogen-bonded to the aromatic rings of the tar compounds, and as free-rotating gas molecules (microbubbles in the tar bulk). The research performed provides an opportunity and methodological base for studying the process of tar conversion in the presence of formic acid into gasoline fractions at temperatures up to 300 degrees C.

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