| Literature DB >> 26057818 |
Andrew R Teixeira1, Christoph Krumm2, Katherine P Vinter2, Alex D Paulsen2, Cheng Zhu2, Saurabh Maduskar2, Kristeen E Joseph2, Katharine Greco1, Michael Stelatto1, Eric Davis1, Brendon Vincent1, Richard Hermann3, Wieslaw Suszynski3, Lanny D Schmidt3, Wei Fan1, Jonathan P Rothstein1, Paul J Dauenhauer4.
Abstract
The condition of heat transfer to lignocellulosic biomass particles during thermal processing at high temperature (>400 °C) dramatically alters the yield and quality of renewable energy and fuels. In this work, crystalline cellulose particles were discovered to lift off heated surfaces by high speed photography similar to the Leidenfrost effect in hot, volatile liquids. Order of magnitude variation in heat transfer rates and cellulose particle lifetimes was observed as intermediate liquid cellulose droplets transitioned from low temperature wetting (500-600 °C) to fully de-wetted, skittering droplets on polished surfaces (>700 °C). Introduction of macroporosity to the heated surface was shown to completely inhibit the cellulose Leidenfrost effect, providing a tunable design parameter to control particle heat transfer rates in industrial biomass reactors.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26057818 PMCID: PMC4460903 DOI: 10.1038/srep11238
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Reactive Liftoff of Crystalline Cellulose Particles on Polished Silicon.
a. The rate of evaporation of initially crystalline cellulose particles (average 220 μm) varies by an order of magnitude as the intermediate droplet transitions from low temperature wetting (blue) to film boiling (black) and into the Leidenfrost regime (green). Error bars represent 95% confidence. b. Initially microcrystalline cellulose forms a melt (160 ms), wets polished silicon at 625 °C, and completely evaporates by 250 ms. See extended data for video. c. Microcrystalline cellulose particles form a melt on polished silicon at 750 °C which lifts off the surface and moves out of frame (179 ms). Scale bars = 100 μm.
Figure 2Individual Cellulose Particles on Polished Silicon.
a. Cross sectional area of cellulose particles (initially ~300 μm) normalized to initial values with reaction time (0–800 ms) for 500–800 °C on polished silicon. b. Profile images of particles at lower temperature (625 °C), which liquefy and wet with increased contact area before rapidly evaporating. See extended data for full video. c. Profile images of particles at higher temperatures (750 °C), where crystalline cellulose liquefies and off gases at sufficient rate to lift molten cellulose droplets above the surface.
Figure 3Structured Surfaces for Suppression of Cellulose Particle Liftoff.
a. Cellulose particles (~220 μm) liquefy and evaporate at increasing rate as temperature increases on porous silica and alumina, with no measurable transition to film boiling. Error bars represent 95% confidence. b,c. Droplet of molten cellulose on porous alumina (image and diagram). See extended data for full video. d. Position of cellulose particles on polished silicon (green) and porous alumina (blue) indicate suppressed liftoff and motion (skittering) on porous materials. e. 3D profilometry of porous alumina indicates minimal surface roughness. f. Scanning electron micrograph reveals 1–5 μm macropores for sweeping product vapors away from particles.