The determination of the structure of carbon materials is an analytical problem that join the research scientific communities involved in the chemical characterization of heavy fuel-derived products (heavy fuel oils, coal-derived fuels, shale oil, etc.) and of carbon materials (polycyclic aromatic compounds, tar, soot) produced in many combustion processes. The knowledge of the structure of these ‘‘difficult’’ fuels and of the carbon materials produced by incomplete combustion is relevant to research for the best low-environmental impact operation of combustion systems; but an array of many analytical and spectroscopic tools are necessary, and often not su.cient, to attempt the characterization of such complex products and in particular to determine the distribution of molecular masses. In this paper the size exclusion chromatography using N-methyl-pyrrolidinone as eluent has been applied for the characterization of different carbon materials starting from typical carbon species, commercially available like polyacenaphthylene,carbon black, naphthalene pitch up to combustion products like soot and soot extract collected in fuel-rich combustion systems. Two main fractions were detected, separated and molecular weights (MWs) determined by comparison with polystyrene standards: a .rst fraction consisted of particles with very large molecular masses (>100, 000 u); a second fraction consisted of species in a relatively small MW range (200–600 u). The distribution of these fractions changes in dependence on the carbon sample characteristics. Fluorescence spectroscopy applied on the fractions separated by size-exclusion chromatography has been used and comparatively interpreted giving indications on the di.erences and similarities in chemical structure of such di.erent materials.

Comparative analysis of the structure of carbon materials relevant in combustion

Apicella B;Barbella R;Ciajolo A;Tregrossi A
2003

Abstract

The determination of the structure of carbon materials is an analytical problem that join the research scientific communities involved in the chemical characterization of heavy fuel-derived products (heavy fuel oils, coal-derived fuels, shale oil, etc.) and of carbon materials (polycyclic aromatic compounds, tar, soot) produced in many combustion processes. The knowledge of the structure of these ‘‘difficult’’ fuels and of the carbon materials produced by incomplete combustion is relevant to research for the best low-environmental impact operation of combustion systems; but an array of many analytical and spectroscopic tools are necessary, and often not su.cient, to attempt the characterization of such complex products and in particular to determine the distribution of molecular masses. In this paper the size exclusion chromatography using N-methyl-pyrrolidinone as eluent has been applied for the characterization of different carbon materials starting from typical carbon species, commercially available like polyacenaphthylene,carbon black, naphthalene pitch up to combustion products like soot and soot extract collected in fuel-rich combustion systems. Two main fractions were detected, separated and molecular weights (MWs) determined by comparison with polystyrene standards: a .rst fraction consisted of particles with very large molecular masses (>100, 000 u); a second fraction consisted of species in a relatively small MW range (200–600 u). The distribution of these fractions changes in dependence on the carbon sample characteristics. Fluorescence spectroscopy applied on the fractions separated by size-exclusion chromatography has been used and comparatively interpreted giving indications on the di.erences and similarities in chemical structure of such di.erent materials.
2003
Istituto di Ricerche sulla Combustione - IRC - Sede Napoli
Inglese
51
1063
1069
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Soot
pitch
SEC
synchronous fluorescence.
La pubblicazione scientifica scelta si intitola: "Comparative analysis of the structure of carbon materials relevant in combustion” ed è pubblicata su una rivista di importanza internazionale (Chemosphere, vol. 51, 1063 – 1069, 2003). L’ “impact-factor” della rivista era 1.18 al 2001. La pubblicazione è avvenuta dopo che il lavoro scientifico in essa descritto era stato presentato ad un importante congresso internazionale (The 7th International Congress on Toxic Combustion Byproducts, June 4-6, 2001, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina.) ed era stato sottoposto dagli organizzatori del congresso ad un comitato internazionale di revisione per stabilire la sua validità per la pubblicazione su Chemosphere.
4
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Apicella, B; Barbella, R; Ciajolo, A; Tregrossi, A
01 Contributo su Rivista::01.01 Articolo in rivista
none
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/50449
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