The conversion of chicken manure to bio-oil by fast pyrolysis. III. Analyses of chicken manure, bio-oils and char by Py-FIMS and Py-FDMS
- 26 December 2007
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Environmental Science and Health, Part B
- Vol. 43 (1) , 81-95
- https://doi.org/10.1080/03601230701735185
Abstract
Fast pyrolysis of chicken manure produced the following three fractions: bio-oil Fraction I, bio-oil Fraction II, and a char. In a previous investigation we analyzed each of the four materials by curie-point pyrolysis-gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (CpPy-FDMS). The objective of this article is to report on the analyses of the same chicken manure and the three fractions derived from it by fast pyrolysis. We now used pyrolysis-field ionization mass spectrometry (Py-FIMS) to characterize the three fractions. In addition, the two bio-oil materials were analyzed by pyrolysis-field desorption mass spectrometry (Py-FDMS). The use of both Py-FIMS and Py-FDMS produced signals over significantly wider mass ranges than did CpPy-GC/MS, and so allowed us to identify considerably larger numbers of constituents in each material. Individual compounds identified in the mass spectra were classified into the following twelve compound classes: (a) low molecular weight compounds (< m/z 62); (b) carbohydrates; (c) phenols + lignin monomers; (d) lignin dimers; (e) n-alkylbenzenes; (f) N-heterocyclics; (g) n-fatty acids; (h) n-alkanes; (i) alkenes; (j) sterols; (k) n-diols and (l) high molecular weight compounds (> m/z 562). Of special interest were the high abundances of low-molecular weight compounds in the two bio-oils which constituted close to one half of the two bio-oils. Prominent among these compounds were water, ammonia, acetic acid, acetamide, propyl radical, formamide and hydrogen cyanide. The main quantitative differences between the two bio-oils was that bio-oil Fraction I, as analyzed by the two mass spectrometric methods, contained lower concentrations of low-molecular weight compounds, carbohydrates, and N-heterocyclics than bio-oil Fraction II but was richer in lignin dimers, n-alkylbenzenes and aliphatics (n-fatty acids, n-alkanes, alkenes, and n-diols). Of special interest were the N-heterocyclics in the two bio-oils such as pyrazole, pyrazoline, substituted pyrroles, pyridine and substituted pyridines, substituted methoxazole, substituted pyrazines, indole and substituted indoles. Fatty acids in all four materials ranged from n-C(9) to n-C(33), alkanes from n-C(9) to n-C(40), alkenes from C(10:1) to C(40:1) and diols from n-C(7) to n-C(29). The chicken manure, bio-oil Fraction I, and char each contained about 4% sterols with cholesterol, ethylcholestriene, ergosterol, ethylcholestene, ethylcholesterol and beta -sitosterol as major components. Semi-quantitative estimates of the total materials identified by Py-FIMS were: chicken manure: 61.1%; bio-oil Fraction I: 81.3%; bio-oil Fraction II: 78.6%; char: 61.3%; and by Py-FDMS were: bio-oil Fraction I: 65.4%; bio-oil Fraction II: 70.0%.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- The conversion of chicken manure to biooil by fast pyrolysis II. Analysis of chicken manure, biooils, and char by curie-point pyrolysis-gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (Cp Py-GC/MS)Journal of Environmental Science and Health, Part B, 2007
- The conversion of chicken manure to biooil by fast pyrolysis I. Analyses of chicken manure, biooils and char by13C and1H NMR and FTIR spectrophotometryJournal of Environmental Science and Health, Part B, 2007
- Long-term cultivation effects on the quantity and quality of organic matter in selected Canadian prairie soilsGeoderma, 2005
- Thermal stability and composition of mineral‐bound organic matter in density fractions of soilEuropean Journal of Soil Science, 1999
- A Lifetime Perspective on the Chemistry of Soil Organic MatterPublished by Elsevier ,1999
- Analysis of Organic Matter in Soil Extracts and Whole Soils by Pyrolysis-Mass SpectrometryPublished by Elsevier ,1995
- The Analysis of Soil Organic Matter by Pyrolysis‐Field Ionization Mass SpectrometrySoil Science Society of America Journal, 1992
- Differential thermal analysis, thermogravimetry and in-source pyrolysis-mass spectrometry studies on the formation of soil organic matterThermochimica Acta, 1992
- CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF THE ORGANIC MATTER IN FOREST SOILSSoil Science, 1988
- Pyrolysis and soft ionization mass spectrometry of aquatic/terrestrial humic substances and soilsJournal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis, 1987