Effects of post-pyrolysis air oxidation on the chemical composition of biomass chars investigated by solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy

2019 
Abstract Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy was used to characterize the chemical changes induced by thermal air oxidation of biomass chars. Post-pyrolysis air oxidation (PPAO) was applied to anoxically-prepared maple-wood and pecan-shell chars at PPAO temperatures ranging from 300 to 600 °C for up to 40 min. The 13 C NMR data showed that PPAO treatment introduced oxygen functionalities into aromatic rings, primarily C–O and C=O, but also carboxyl groups (COO) identified after spectral editing. The concentration of COO was relatively low ( 3 or ammonium persulfate. Concentrations of the C–O and C=O groups reached a maximum at PPAO temperatures between 350 and 400 °C, and clearly decreased at higher temperatures. These oxygen-containing functional groups were shown to generally increase with increasing PPAO time. Insight into the types and concentrations of oxygen functional groups induced by exposure of biomass chars to hot air has major implications for an understanding of the interaction of char with nutrients, natural organic matter, pollutants, and microbes, as well as electron transfer processes in soil.
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