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Article Dans Une Revue Carbon Année : 2018

Biocarbons from microfibrillated cellulose/lignosulfonate precursors: A study of electrical conductivity development during slow pyrolysis

Résumé

Carbons were elaborated from purely lignocellulosic precursors (Microfibrillated cellulose and Lignosulfonates blends, simplified as MFC/LS blends) by slow pyrolysis (0.2 °C/min) in a large temperature range (400–1200 °C). They were characterized in terms of morphology (scanning electron microscopy), chemical functionalities (infrared spectroscopy), microstructure (Raman spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction) and physical properties (electrical conductivity and density evolution). MFC/LS carbons could achieve high electrical conductivity of 95 S/cm with regard to their low density, i.e.1.14 g/cm3 after pyrolysis at 1000 °C, compared to other biocarbons. The major aim of this work was to understand the electrical conductivity development in MFC/LS-derived biocarbons during the pyrolysis. A descriptive model, based on the progressive conversion of the biomass into conductive engineering carbons and composed of 3 distinct phases, was thus established to illustrate the electrical conductivity development phenomenon.
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Dates et versions

hal-01684619 , version 1 (15-01-2018)

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Ying Shao, Chamseddine Guizani, Philippe Grosseau, Didier Chaussy, Davide Beneventi. Biocarbons from microfibrillated cellulose/lignosulfonate precursors: A study of electrical conductivity development during slow pyrolysis. Carbon, 2018, 129, pp.357 à 366. ⟨10.1016/j.carbon.2017.12.037⟩. ⟨hal-01684619⟩
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