| Literature DB >> 29438312 |
Jun-Ling Tu1, Jiao-Jiao Yuan2.
Abstract
The thermal decomposition behavior of olive hydroxytyrosol (HT) was first studied using thermogravimetry (TG). Cracked chemical bond and evolved gas analysis during the thermal decomposition process of HT were also investigated using thermogravimetry coupled with infrared spectroscopy (TG-FTIR). Thermogravimetry-Differential thermogravimetry (TG-DTG) curves revealed that the thermal decomposition of HT began at 262.8 °C and ended at 409.7 °C with a main mass loss. It was demonstrated that a high heating rate (over 20 K·min-1) restrained the thermal decomposition of HT, resulting in an obvious thermal hysteresis. Furthermore, a thermal decomposition kinetics investigation of HT indicated that the non-isothermal decomposition mechanism was one-dimensional diffusion (D1), integral form g(x) = x², and differential form f(x) = 1/(2x). The four combined approaches were employed to calculate the activation energy (E = 128.50 kJ·mol-1) and Arrhenius preexponential factor (ln A = 24.39 min-1). In addition, a tentative mechanism of HT thermal decomposition was further developed. The results provide a theoretical reference for the potential thermal stability of HT.Entities:
Keywords: TG-FTIR method; hydroxytyrosol; kinetics; thermal decomposition
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29438312 PMCID: PMC6017782 DOI: 10.3390/molecules23020404
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1TG-DTG curve of hydroxytyrosol (HT) at different heating rates. (TG: Thermogravimetry; DTG: Differential thermogravimetry).
Pyrolysis characteristic parameters of HT.
| Heating Rate (K·min−1) | Beginning Temperature (°C) | End Temperature (°C) | Maximum Loss Ratio (%·min−1) | Solid Char (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 | 252.9 | 395.1 | 291.4 | −6.85 | 4.85 |
| 10 | 262.8 | 409.7 | 305.2 | −12.91 | 2.68 |
| 20 | 273.6 | 415.3 | 314.8 | −27.71 | 2.53 |
| 40 | 298.7 | 418.9 | 341.9 | −56.35 | 3.34 |
Kinetic parameter of HT thermal decomposition by Friedman and Flynn-Wall-Ozawa (F-W-O) methods.
| Conversion | Friedman Method | F-W-O Method | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.1 | 121.36 | 0.9329 | 125.71 | 0.9950 |
| 0.2 | 118.89 | 0.9744 | 118.41 | 0.9894 |
| 0.3 | 124.24 | 0.9903 | 118.56 | 0.9858 |
| 0.4 | 126.51 | 0.9815 | 119.64 | 0.9815 |
| 0.5 | 127.05 | 0.9673 | 120.19 | 0.9783 |
| 0.6 | 133.66 | 0.9317 | 123.37 | 0.9784 |
| 0.7 | 249.99 | 0.9 | 174.39 | 0.9503 |
| Mean | 143.1 | — | 128.61 | — |
“—” means without this value.
Kinetic parameter of HT thermal decomposition by the Coats-Redfern method.
| No. | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ln | ln | ln | ln | |||||||||
| F1 | 71.80 | 12.91 | 0.9782 | 79.79 | 14.90 | 0.9937 | 82.91 | 15.97 | 0.9934 | 85.04 | 16.56 | 0.9911 |
| F2 | 96.65 | 18.86 | 0.987 | 104.83 | 20.97 | 0.9682 | 109.56 | 22.14 | 0.968 | 112.36 | 22.72 | 0.9654 |
| F3 | 126.61 | 26.15 | 0.9779 | 136.33 | 28.15 | 0.9349 | 141.52 | 29.45 | 0.9348 | 145.14 | 29.99 | 0.9323 |
| D1 | 114.36 | 21.28 | 0.9489 | 128.77 | 24.39 | 0.9976 | 133.69 | 25.65 | 0.9975 | 137.18 | 26.22 | 0.9961 |
| D2 | 125.43 | 23.27 | 0.9616 | 140.43 | 26.43 | 0.9991 | 145.77 | 27.74 | 0.9989 | 149.57 | 28.30 | 0.9972 |
| D3 | 138.74 | 24.97 | 0.9732 | 154.32 | 28.16 | 0.998 | 160.17 | 29.53 | 0.9978 | 164.33 | 30.08 | 0.9958 |
| D4 | 129.83 | 22.83 | 0.9660 | 145.03 | 26.00 | 0.9991 | 150.54 | 27.33 | 0.9989 | 154.45 | 27.88 | 0.9971 |
| A2 | 31.30 | 3.64 | 0.9707 | 35.21 | 5.03 | 0.9924 | 36.69 | 5.92 | 0.9921 | 37.62 | 6.55 | 0.9892 |
| A3 | 17.80 | 0.27 | 0.959 | 20.35 | 1.47 | 0.9906 | 21.28 | 2.30 | 0.9902 | 21.81 | 2.93 | 0.9865 |
| R1 | 52.58 | 8.11 | 0.9392 | 59.70 | 10.07 | 0.9971 | 62.08 | 11.05 | 0.997 | 63.69 | 11.66 | 0.9954 |
| R2 | 61.49 | 9.66 | 0.9629 | 69.05 | 11.64 | 0.9988 | 71.77 | 12.66 | 0.9986 | 73.62 | 13.27 | 0.9965 |
| R3 | 64.77 | 10.07 | 0.9689 | 72.48 | 12.06 | 0.9978 | 75.32 | 13.09 | 0.9976 | 77.26 | 13.82 | 0.9954 |
| P2 | 21.69 | 1.04 | 0.9107 | 25.17 | 2.42 | 0.9956 | 26.27 | 3.27 | 0.9954 | 26.94 | 3.91 | 0.9933 |
| P3 | 11.39 | −1.67 | 0.8598 | 13.65 | −0.45 | 0.9927 | 14.34 | 0.36 | 0.9926 | 14.69 | 1.01 | 0.9895 |
| P4 | 6.24 | −3.31 | 0.7605 | 7.90 | −2.12 | 0.9867 | 8.37 | −1.33 | 0.9868 | 8.57 | −0.69 | 0.982 |
Figure 2Kinetics compensation effect of HT thermal decomposition by different heating rates.
Figure 3Three-dimensional infrared spectra of HT.
Figure 4Infrared spectra of HT at particular time points.
FTIR analysis from HT thermal decomposition products.
| Wavenumber (cm−1) | Vibration of Corresponding Bond | Functional Group |
|---|---|---|
| 3964–3500, 1300–1800 | O–H stretching | H2O |
| 2313–2361, 669 | C=O stretching, C=O bending | CO2 |
| 1684–1745, 2822–2915 | C=O stretching, C–H stretching | R–CHO |
| 1000–1300, 3585–3650 | C–O stretching, O–H stretching | R–OH |
| 2900–3000 | C–H stretching | –CH3 (saturation) |
| 3066 | C–H stretching (aromatic ring) | |
| 1600 | =C–C=C– (aromatic ring) | |
| 1715 | C=C stretching | –C=C |
| 3200–3650 | O–H stretching | –OH |
| 1000–1300 | C–O stretching | –C–O |
Figure 5Proposed mechanism of HT thermal decomposition under a N2 atmosphere.
Kinetic mechanism functions of pyrolysis.
| Number | Model | Reaction Mechanism | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 (F1) | Chemical reaction | −ln(1 − | |
| 2 (F2) | (1 − | ||
| 3 (F3) | [(1 − | ||
| 4 (D1) | Diffusion | One-dimensional diffusion | |
| 5 (D2) | Two-dimensional diffusion | (1 − | |
| 6 (D3) | Three-dimensional diffusion (Jander equation) | [1 − (1 − x)1/3]2 | |
| 7 (D4) | Three-dimensional diffusion (Ginstling-Brounshtein equation) | (1 − 2 | |
| 8 (A2) | Random nucleation and growth | Two-dimensional | [−ln(1 − |
| 9 (A3) | Three-dimensional | [−ln(1 − | |
| 10 (R1) | Interfacial reaction | One-dimensional | |
| 11 (R2) | Cylindrical symmetry | [1 − (1 − x)1/2] | |
| 12 (R3) | Spherical symmetry | [1 − (1 − x)1/3] | |
| 13 (P2) | Exponential nucleation | Power function, | |
| 14 (P3) | Power function, | ||
| 15 (P4) | Power function, |