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- Language
- English
- Conflict of Interest
- In relation to this article, we declare that there is no conflict of interest.
- Publication history
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Received February 5, 2024
Accepted May 9, 2024
- This is an Open-Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/bync/3.0) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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Investigating the Pyrolysis Properties of Cellulose and Lignin Isolated from Different Turkish Biomass Using TG-FTIR
Abstract
In this study, the devolatilization behavior of eastern Mediterranean hazelnut, almond, and sunfl ower residue was studied
using a TGA–FTIR laboratory-scale setup. The original biomasses were fractionated using the Van Soest detergent analysis.
Both the original and fractionated biomasses were investigated. The reaction temperature was increased to 900 °C using a
heating rate of 2 °Cmin −1 . The pyrolysis of lignin produced the largest gas production, with CO 2 constituting up the bulk of
the gas mixture. CO is the second highest-yield gas and is primarily formed from the samples of cellulose and lignin. For
the lignin samples, the pyrolysis operation yielded the maximum amount of char, while the combustion of the lignin chars
produced the highest amount of gas yields. On the other hand, lignin samples, particularly almond lignin, have the lowest
tar production. Due to the high ash content the sunfl ower stalk sample devolatilized at a lower temperature with respect to
the rest of the samples, resulting at a mass loss peak at lower temperature. The hazelnut lignin showed the mass loss peak at
the highest temperature. Generally, CO 2 showed the highest mass yield, and it was mainly produced from the cellulose and
whole biomass samples. Among all samples CH 4 was produced in minor quantities and mostly in lignin devolatilization.
Furthermore, the devolatilization behavior of the fractionated biopolymers is not enough to suffi ciently predict the behavior
of the whole biomass sample. The results described in this paper can help further the understanding of thermal processes
where almond, hazelnut, and sunfl ower residues from the eastern Mediterranean region, and their fractionated-derived
products are involved.