Investigating the Hydrothermal Decomposition of Hemicellulose

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The discussion centers on the hydrothermal decomposition of hemicellulose, specifically addressing the high conversion rate of 20% to acetic acid reported by the user, which contrasts with findings in other literature. There is uncertainty about the fate of the acetic acid and the quantities of other byproducts like H2, CH4, CO, and CO2. Participants emphasize the need for more detailed information about the user's reaction model and the referenced studies to provide accurate troubleshooting. Questions arise regarding the model's consideration of other compounds like 2-furaldehyde and lactic acid, as well as the oxygen limitations in the process. Overall, the conversation highlights the complexity of reaction kinetics in this area and the need for comprehensive data.
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I'm working on the hydrothermal decomposition of hemicellulose and one of the reaction products is acetic acid. The incomplete reaction model I'm using says 20% of my original hemicellulose is converted into acetic acid. In comparison to other papers this seems to be too high. So were does my acetic acid go?
I know some H2, CH4, CO and CO2 is produced, but not in what quantities. I thought that detailed reaction kinetics on the subject would be "known", but I'm not able to find it.
A paper that is close by is: "Renewable hydrogen production by a mild-temperature steam reforming of the model compound acetic acid derived from bio-oil" by Z. Li et al from 2012.
I'm working on the hydrothermal decomposition of hemicellulose and one of the reaction products is acetic acid. The incomplete reaction model I'm using says 20% of my original hemicellulose is converted into acetic acid. In comparison to other papers this seems to be too high. So were does my acetic acid go?
I know some H2, CH4, CO and CO2 is produced, but not in what quantities. I thought that detailed reaction kinetics on the subject would be "known", but I'm not able to find it.
A paper that is close by is: "Renewable hydrogen production by a mild-temperature steam reforming of the model compound acetic acid derived from bio-oil" by Z. Li et al from 2012.
 
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Yours, the incomplete reaction model's or the 'other papers'? Yours, the incomplete reaction model's or the 'other papers'?
 


ROFL

That's what happens when you post in several places using copy/paste.
 


Mine in this case is the incomplete reaction model.Mine in this case is the incomplete reaction model.
 


hank63 said:
Mine in this case is the incomplete reaction model.Mine in this case is the incomplete reaction model.

OK, OK! :smile: Seriously though, you don't tell us anything about your reaction model (name, author, basis, etc...), you don't tell us anything about the "other papers" (again, name author, journal reference, etc...) but you want us to troubleshoot or account for differences between them? Take a minute and think about that.

Does your model accurately account for 2-furaldehyde, 5-hydroxymethyl-2-furaldehyde and lactic acid? Do the "other papers" discuss these as well? Is this an oxygen limited system and how is supplemental oxygen handled for your process?
 
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