Y. Martin et al., A study of the polymerization and condensation reactions during the heat treatment of pitches under gas-blowing conditions, ENERG FUEL, 14(2), 2000, pp. 380-392
A coal tar pitch and a petroleum pitch were heat treated under gas-blowing
conditions (air and argon) at 300, 350, and 425 degrees C in order to inves
tigate the chemical transformations involved. The evolution profiles of fou
r classes of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) in the toluene-soluble
(TS) fractions were determined using an HPLC method. The influence of the t
ype of gas on heat-treatment characteristics of the pitches was clearly ide
ntified. The evolution of the different classes of PAH present in the TS of
a coal tar pitch to yield toluene-insoluble (TI) material is more signific
ant and faster under air-blowing than under argon-blowing. The presence of
oxygen promotes a general increase in the reactivity of the TS, especially
in the case of the peri-condensed compounds. The topology of the latter str
ongly determines their higher increase of reactivity with oxygen. The react
ivity of the cata-condensed PAH is significantly higher in the case of the
petroleum pitch due to the higher presence of alkyl substituents. It is the
refore concluded that the chemical composition of the raw pitches influence
s their behavior during the carbonization under gas-blowing conditions. The
evolution of cata- and peri-condensed compounds during the heat-treatment
of the pitches under gas-blowing conditions did not always fit simple first
-order kinetics. A model for the overall. reaction pathway was proposed, in
which p-resins constitute an intermediate product in the transformation of
TS to quinoline-insoluble (QI). A good correlation between some thermal pa
rameters obtained by TGA/DTG: and the chemical composition of the pitches e
xpressed in terms of their HPLC compound class distribution was found.