Vacuum Pyrolysis of Bark From Pinus Ponderosa
- 1 September 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Wood Chemistry and Technology
- Vol. 8 (3), 393-412
- https://doi.org/10.1080/02773818808070692
Abstract
The inner and outer barks of ponderosa pine (P. ponderosa) have been pyrolysed at 350°C in vacuum and the tars analyzed by gas chromatography after tri-O-methylsilylation. The nine major peaks in the gas chromatogram have been identified and quantified and it is concluded that all (except pinitol) originate predominantly from polysaccharide components of the barks. They account for up to 53% of the total tar. Removal of most of the metal ions from the barks by ion exchange with dilute acid has a dramatic influence on the tar constituents, e.g. increasing the yield of levoglucanosan from inner bark from 0.8% to 13%. which represents 31% of the original glucan content of the bark. The polyphenol and lignin components of the bark are predominantly converted directly to char at 350°C.This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Preliminary investigation of the association of inorganic cations with carboxylic acid groups in woodCarbohydrate Research, 1985
- The influence of exchangeable cations on the carbonization of biomassJournal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis, 1984
- Thermal fragmentation for the identification of pyrolytic products from bark polysaccharidesAnalytical Chemistry, 1981
- Catalytic conversion of wood barks to fuel gasesIndustrial & Engineering Chemistry Product Research and Development, 1981
- Gasification reactions of chars and modified chars produced from jack pine barkThe Canadian Journal of Chemical Engineering, 1980
- A kinetic model for pyrolysis of Douglas fir barkFuel, 1978
- The thermal reactivity of wood waste systemsWood Science and Technology, 1978
- A thermogravimetric study of the pyrolysis of the bark and chemically-modified bark of jack pine, pinus banksiana lambWood Science and Technology, 1975
- A STUDY OF THE PECTIN PRESENT IN THE BARK OF AMABILIS FIR (ABIES AMABILIS)Canadian Journal of Chemistry, 1965
- ISOLATION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF A CELLULOSE FROM THE INNER BARK OF WHITE BIRCH (BETULA PAPYRIFERA)Canadian Journal of Chemistry, 1960