2013 AIChE Annual Meeting

(653c) Production and Characterization of Straight-Run Thermal Deoxygenation (TDO) Fuels

Authors

Scott Eaton - Presenter, University of Maine
M. Clayton Wheeler, University of Maine
Sedat H. Beis, University of Maine
Sampath A. Karunarathne, University of Maine
Adriaan van Heiningen, University of Maine and Aalto University



Thermal DeOxygenation (TDO) refers to a simple, non-catalytic, process which produces highly deoxygenated crude oils from levulinic and formic acids formed by acid hydrolysis of biomass feedstocks.  The TDO reaction is a single-step decomposition reaction which converts the neutralized acids to crude hydrocarbons, chars, CO2, water and volatiles at 450°C and at ambient pressure.  The TDO crude oils have long-term shelf-stability and very low water miscibility compared to fast pyrolysis oils.  Successful TDO scale-up to 50L semi-batch operation has produced crude oils with broad boiling point distribution, between 75° and 585°C, and oxygen content of 1-8 wt.%.