Influence of Loblolly Pine Anatomical Fractions and Tree Age on Oil Yield and Composition During Fast Pyrolysis

Anne Starace, Scott Palmer, Kellene Orton, Carson Pierce, Earl Christensen, Andy Larson, Rianna Martinez, Jordan Klinger, Michael Griffin, Calvin Mukarakate, Kristiina Iisa, Matthew Wiatrowski, Abhijit Dutta, James Parks II, Oluwafemi Oyedeji, Daniel Carpenter

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Fast pyrolysis of woody materials is a technology pathway for producing renewable fuels and chemicals. This is a presentation of isolating needles, bark, and stemwood from a single tree as well as isolating stemwood and whole tree samples from the same species of tree with different ages and pyrolyzing each individually as well as in mixtures. This gives insight into the role of tree anatomical fractions on the resulting intermediate oil product as well as into interactions between these components. The highest carbon content oil (45.1 wt% as received) was produced from a one-to-one mixture of stemwood and needles, followed by the pure stemwood (43.4-43.8 wt% as received), while the lowest oil carbon content was from a one-to-one blend of bark and needles (26.7 wt% as received). The pyrolysis oil yield (combining oil and aqueous where separation occurred) varied from 54 wt% as received (needles) to 72.3 wt% as received (stemwood). When comparing trees of different ages, we find the change in the ratio of the anatomical fractions is a dominant factor in the product composition and yields, while the product composition and yields vary slightly with tree age when only the stemwood is pyrolyzed. Here we present the bench-scale pyrolysis, yields, and product characterization of loblolly pine feedstocks (13- vs. 23 year-old, residues, air-classified residues, whole tree, needles, bark, and stemwood).
Original languageAmerican English
JournalSustainable Energy and Fuels
DOIs
StatePublished - 2024

NREL Publication Number

  • NREL/JA-5100-89691

Keywords

  • anatomical fractions
  • loblolly pine
  • pyrolysis
  • tree age

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