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Activated Carbon Produced by Pyrolysis of Waste Wood and Straw for Potential Wastewater Adsorption

Katarzyna Januszewicz, Paweł Kazimierski, Maciej Klein, Dariusz Kardaś, Justyna Łuczak

2020Materials101 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Pyrolysis of straw pellets and wood strips was performed in a fixed bed reactor. The chars, solid products of thermal degradation, were used as potential materials for activated carbon production. Chemical and physical activation processes were used to compare properties of the products. The chemical activation agent KOH was chosen and the physical activation was conducted with steam and carbon dioxide as oxidising gases. The effect of the activation process on the surface area, pore volume, structure and composition of the biochar was examined. The samples with the highest surface area (1349.6 and 1194.4 m2/g for straw and wood activated carbons, respectively) were obtained when the chemical activation with KOH solution was applied. The sample with the highest surface area was used as an adsorbent for model wastewater contamination removal.

Topics & Concepts

PyrolysisActivated carbonStrawAdsorptionBiocharWastewaterSpecific surface areaSawdustMaterials sciencePelletsWaste managementPulp and paper industryCarbon fibersVolume (thermodynamics)Chemical engineeringChemistryComposite materialOrganic chemistryCatalysisInorganic chemistryQuantum mechanicsEngineeringComposite numberPhysicsThermochemical Biomass Conversion ProcessesAdsorption and biosorption for pollutant removalFiber-reinforced polymer composites
Activated Carbon Produced by Pyrolysis of Waste Wood and Straw for Potential Wastewater Adsorption | Litcius