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Title Thermogravimetric kinetic analysis of catalytic and non-catalytic pyrolysis of simulated municipal solid waste
ID_Doc 14754
Authors Raja, N; Monsalve-Bravo, GM; Kaneti, YV; Mensah, J; Wilson, K; Lee, AF; Konarova, M
Title Thermogravimetric kinetic analysis of catalytic and non-catalytic pyrolysis of simulated municipal solid waste
Year 2023
Published
DOI 10.1016/j.cej.2023.144046
Abstract Municipal solid waste (MSW) disposal through landfill and incineration represents a costly and hazardous challenge to global health, and loss of underutilised resource for the circular economy. Thermal pyrolysis of the organic components of MSW offers a scalable route to liquid fuels, but process optimisation requires deep insight into the associated thermochemistry and kinetics. Here we apply thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) and kinetic modelling to the (catalytic) pyrolysis of a model MSW feedstock comprising cellulose, sucrose, sugarcane bagasse and low-density polyethylene (LDPE). Co-pyrolysis of biomass and plastic waste, with or without Al-SBA-15, MM-Al-SBA-15 or HZSM-5 catalysts, occurs in three main stages, namely the melting and concomitant evaporation of volatiles, and subsequent decomposition of carbohydrate, then LDPE and finally lignin components. The rate of non-catalytic MSW pyrolysis increased with sample heating rates (from 20 to 120 degrees C /min) but had little impact on the temperature or mass loss during each stage. Catalytic pyrolysis is sensitive to the catalyst:feedstock mass ratio; increasing this ratio from 1 to 5 increased mass losses during the removal of volatiles and three subsequent decomposition stages, while lowering the temperature of LDPE decomposition. Kinetic analysis by Friedman's isoconversional method reveals a monotonic increase in activation energy for each stage of (noncatalytic and catalytic) MSW pyrolysis. However, energy barriers for individual stages decreased with increasing catalyst:feedstock ratio and were sensitive to the catalyst type: Al-SBA-15 offers the largest decrease in barriers for carbohydrate (-86 kJ/mol) and LDPE decomposition (-92 kJ/mol), and similar promotion to HZSM-5 for lignin decomposition (similar to 100 kJ/mol), at the highest catalyst content. TGA is an effective tool for catalyst selection and process optimisation provided heating rates < 60 degrees C /min are employed, above which pyrolysis appears heat transfer limited.
Author Keywords Pyrolysis; Catalysis; Waste valorisation; Biomass; Plastics; Kinetic modelling; Catalyst loading; Municipal solid waste
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
EID WOS:001034304000001
WoS Category Engineering, Environmental; Engineering, Chemical
Research Area Engineering
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