Thermal degradation of 18 amino acids during pyrolytic processes.

Sci Rep

Jiangxi Provincial Key Laboratory of Genesis and Remediation of Groundwater Pollution, East China University of Technology, Nanchang, 330013, China.

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Biomass pyrolysis significantly affects climate, ecosystems, air quality, and the global carbon and nitrogen cycles, with nitrogen emissions being influenced by the protein content of the biomass.
  • Controlled experiments were conducted using 18 free amino acids to study their behavior during pyrolysis at temperatures of 160 to 240 °C, showing that higher heat and longer duration cause greater degradation of these amino acids.
  • The study found that the degradation of amino acids follows first-order reaction kinetics, with activation energies ranging from 88.5 to 137.44 kJ/mol, providing insights into nitrogen compound transformations during biomass combustion.

Article Abstract

Biomass pyrolysis greatly impacts climates, ecosystem dynamics, air quality, human health, global carbon and nitrogen cycle. The emissions of nitrogen-containing compounds from biomass pyrolysis highly depend on the protein nitrogen existing in biomass. However, the quantitative kinetic information, including the rate constant and apparent activation energy of individual amino acid induced by pyrolysis are still yet to be well-constrained. Towards this, we performed a series of controlled pyrolysis experiments where 18 equimolar free amino acids standard mixtures were pyrolyzed under ambient oxygen at temperatures between 160 and 240 °C. Additionally, straw samples were pyrolyzed to understand the mechanism of combined amino acids in protein liberation to free amino acids during pyrolytic processes. Our observations indicated that an increase in heating duration and temperature promote the degradation of free amino acids. Further, the heating stability of the 18 examined amino acids varied, which could be related to the length and functional groups present in their side chains. Our result shows that the degradation processes of all examined 18 amino acids followed irreversible first-order reaction kinetics in air within the given temperature range, with their activation energy ranging from 88.5 to 137.44 kJ mol. The distinct distribution patterns of both combined and free amino acids in aerosol samples from straw pyrolytic processes were obtained. The kinetic information of amino acids garnered herein helps to elucidate the transformation mechanisms of nitrogenous compounds during biomass burning.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11589139PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-79032-8DOI Listing

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