The effect of condensing temperature on composition of bio-oil obtained via fractional condensation was investigated by pyrolysis-condensation experiments of walnut shells at condensing temperatures from 290 K to 370 K. The condensing efficiency of the first stage condenser decreased from 0.59 to 0.12 with increasing temperature. Moisture of bio-oil decreased from 40% to 5%, but the C/O ratio increased from 0.50 to 1.50. Compared with contents observed at the lowest condensation temperature, the maximum content of each component increased by 50%-500%. Combined with variations in condensing efficiency and composition content, the optimum condensing temperature range for declining water in bio-oil was 340-350 K. The condensing temperature associated with the enrichment of acetic acid and furfural was 345 K. The 355 K optimum condensing temperature could be selected to achieve the maximum enrichment of guaiacol and its derivatives.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2019.121370 | DOI Listing |
Sci Adv
January 2025
School of Materials Science and Engineering, Peking University, Beijing 100871, P.R. China.
Microcavity exciton polaritons (polaritons) as part-light part-matter quasiparticles garner considerable attention for Bose-Einstein condensation at elevated temperatures. Recently, halide perovskites have emerged as promising room-temperature polaritonic platforms because of their large exciton binding energies and superior optical properties. However, currently, inducing room-temperature nonequilibrium polariton condensation in perovskite microcavities requires optical pulsed excitations with high excitation densities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
December 2024
Xi'an Jiaotong University, School of Microelectronics & State Key Laboratory for Mechanical Behavior of Materials, Xi'an 710049, China.
The bismuth monolayer has recently been experimentally identified as a novel platform for the investigation of two-dimensional single-element ferroelectric system. Here, we model the potential energy surface of a bismuth monolayer by employing a message-passing neural network and achieve an error smaller than 1.2 meV per atom.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
December 2024
Brookhaven National Laboratory, Condensed Matter Physics and Materials Science Division, Upton, New York 11973, USA.
The notion of "half fire, half ice" was recently introduced to describe an exotic macroscopic ground-state degeneracy emerging in a ferrimagnet under the critical magnetic field, in which the "hot" spins are fully disordered on the sublattice with smaller magnetic moments and the "cold" spins are fully ordered on the sublattice with larger magnetic moments. Here, we further point out that this state has a twin named "half ice, half fire" in which the hot and cold spins switch positions. The new state is an excited state-thus hidden in the ground-state phase diagram-and is robust with respect to the interactions that destroy the half-fire, half-ice state.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
December 2024
Duke University, Department of Physics, Durham, North Carolina 27708, USA.
The emergence of a quantum spin liquid (QSL), a state of matter that can result when electron spins are highly correlated but do not become ordered, has been the subject of a considerable body of research in condensed matter physics [1,2]. Spin liquid states have been proposed as hosts for high-temperature superconductivity [3] and can host topological properties with potential applications in quantum information science [4]. The excitations of most quantum spin liquids are not conventional spin waves but rather quasiparticles known as spinons, whose existence is well established experimentally only in one-dimensional systems; the unambiguous experimental realization of QSL behavior in higher dimensions remains challenging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Condens Matter
January 2025
School of Physical Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology Mandi, Mandi, Mandi, Himachal Pradesh, 175075, INDIA.
Magnetic systems, wherein competing degree of freedoms arising from spin orbit coupling and crystal electric field lead to non-trivial magnetic ground states, remains in the forefront of research in condensed matter physics. Here, we present a comprehensive investigation on three-dimensional rare-earth based spin systems NdTaO4 and NdNbO4, where the Nd ions sit on a stretched diamond lattice. No signatures of long-range ordering and spin freezing are observed down to 1.
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