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Featured researches published by Cristian Torri.


Bioresource Technology | 2010

Extraction of hydrocarbons from microalga Botryococcus braunii with switchable solvents

Chiara Samorì; Cristian Torri; Giulia Samorì; Daniele Fabbri; Paola Galletti; Franca Guerrini; Rossella Pistocchi; Emilio Tagliavini

Lipid extraction is a critical step in the development of biofuels from microalgae. Here a new procedure was proposed to extract hydrocarbons from dried and water-suspended samples of the microalga Botryococcus braunii by using switchable-polarity solvents (SPS) based on 1,8-diazabicyclo-[5.4.0]-undec-7-ene (DBU) and an alcohol. The high affinity of the non-ionic form of DBU/alcohol SPS towards non-polar compounds was exploited to extract hydrocarbons from algae, while the ionic character of the DBU-alkyl carbonate form, obtained by the addition of CO(2), was used to recover hydrocarbons from the SPS. DBU/octanol and DBU/ethanol SPS were tested for the extraction efficiency of lipids from freeze-dried B. braunii samples and compared with n-hexane and chloroform/methanol. The DBU/octanol system was further evaluated for the extraction of hydrocarbons directly from algal culture samples. DBU/octanol exhibited the highest yields of extracted hydrocarbons from both freeze-dried and liquid algal samples (16% and 8.2% respectively against 7.8% and 5.6% with n-hexane).


Bioresource Technology | 2014

Biochar enables anaerobic digestion of aqueous phase from intermediate pyrolysis of biomass

Cristian Torri; Daniele Fabbri

Intermediate pyrolysis produces a two-phase liquid whose aqueous phase is characterized by low heating value and high water content (aqueous pyrolysis liquid, APL). Anaerobic digestion can be the straightest way to produce a fuel (methane) from this material. Batch tests showed poor performance in anaerobic digestion of APL, which underlined the inhibition of biological process. Nutrient supplementation was ineffective, whereas biochar addition increased yield of methane (60±15% of theoretical) with respect to pure APL (34±6% of theoretical) and improved the reaction rate. On the basis of batch results, a semi-continuous biomethanation test was set up, by adding an increasingly amount of APL in a 30ml reactor preloaded with biochar (0.8gml(-1)). With a daily input of 5gd(-1)l(-1) of APL (corresponding to overall amount of 0.1kgl(-1) added before the end of the study) the yield of methane was 65±5% of the theoretical.


Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2012

Bio-oils from biomass slow pyrolysis: A chemical and toxicological screening

Mauro Cordella; Cristian Torri; Alessio Adamiano; Daniele Fabbri; Federica Barontini; Valerio Cozzani

Bio-oils were produced from bench-scale slow-pyrolysis of three different biomass samples (corn stalks, poplar and switchgrass). Experimental protocols were developed and applied in order to screen their chemical composition. Several hazardous compounds were detected in the bio-oil samples analysed, including phenols, furans and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. A procedure was outlined and applied to the assessment of toxicological and carcinogenic hazards of the bio-oils. The following hazardous properties were considered: acute toxicity; ecotoxicity; chronic toxicity; carcinogenicity. Parameters related to these properties were quantified for each component identified in the bio-oils and overall values were estimated for the bio-oils. The hazard screening carried out for the three bio-oils considered suggested that: (i) hazards to human health could be associated with chronic exposures to the bio-oils; (ii) acute toxic effects on humans and eco-toxic effects on aquatic ecosystems could also be possible in the case of loss of containment; and (iii) bio-oils may present a marginal potential carcinogenicity. The approach outlined allows the collection of screening information on the potential hazards posed by the bio-oils. This can be particularly useful when limited time and analytical resources reduce the possibility to obtain detailed specific experimental data.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2010

GC-MS determination of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons evolved from pyrolysis of biomass

Daniele Fabbri; Alessio Adamiano; Cristian Torri

AbstractA method for the determination of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in liquid pyrolysate of biomass (bio-oil) was developed with attention to greenness along with accuracy. Bio-oil obtained from preparative pyrolysis at 500xa0°C of poplar wood as representative biomass matrix was dissolved into acetonitrile (ACN). An aliquot of the ACN solution (0.1xa0mg bio-oil) was added with water (20% v/v) and spiked with perdeuterated standards, then PAHs were extracted with n-hexane and separated from phenolic interferents by silica gel solid-phase extraction (SPE). All 16 priority PAHs were detected at concentrations between 7.7xa0µg g−1 (naphthalene) and 0.1xa0µg g−1 (benz[a]anthracene) with RSD in the 6–23% range. Recovery of perdeuterated acenaphthene, phenanthrene and chrysene was 84, 93 and 90%, respectively. Results obtained from the analysis of bio-oil were used to evaluate the performance of analytical pyrolysis conducted with a heated platinum filament in off-line configuration. Two sampling procedures were compared: (1) sorption onto silica gel followed by elution with n-hexane (Py-SPE), (2) dynamic solid-phase micro-extraction followed by fibre cleanup with aqueous ammonia (Py-SPME). Emission levels of priority PAHs could be determined by Py-SPE with RSD in the 13–45% range, while Py-SPME was unsatisfactory for quantitation. Emission levels determined by Py-SPE fell in the 6.4–0.1xa0µg g−1 range slightly higher than those calculated from bio-oil analysis. Both Py methods were adequate for screening purposes to assess the effect of catalysts on PAH formation. In particular, they agreed to show that the content of PAHs expected in bio-oil increased dramatically when pyrolysis was conducted over HZSM-5 zeolite.n FigurePAHs in the pyrolysate of poplar wood: novel procedures of bio-oil analysis and analytical pyrolysis of biomass


Bioresource Technology | 2011

Preliminary investigation on the production of fuels and bio-char from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii biomass residue after bio-hydrogen production

Cristian Torri; Chiara Samorì; Alessio Adamiano; Daniele Fabbri; Cecilia Faraloni; Giuseppe Torzillo

The aim of this work was to investigate the potential conversion of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii biomass harvested after hydrogen production. The spent algal biomass was converted into nitrogen-rich bio-char, biodiesel and pyrolysis oil (bio-oil). The yield of lipids (algal oil), obtained by solvent extraction, was 15 ± 2% w/w(dry-biomass). This oil was converted into biodiesel with a 8.7 ± 1% w/w(dry-biomass) yield. The extraction residue was pyrolysed in a fixed bed reactor at 350 °C obtaining bio-char as the principal fraction (44 ± 1% w/w(dry-biomass)) and 28 ± 2% w/w(dry-biomass) of bio-oil. Pyrolysis fractions were characterized by elemental analysis, while the chemical composition of bio-oil was fully characterized by GC-MS, using various derivatization techniques. Energy outputs resulting from this approach were distributed in hydrogen (40%), biodiesel (12%) and pyrolysis fractions (48%), whereas bio-char was the largest fraction in terms of mass.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2011

Application of ATR-far-infrared spectroscopy to the analysis of natural resins.

Silvia Prati; Giorgia Sciutto; Rocco Mazzeo; Cristian Torri; Daniele Fabbri

This study proposes FTIR spectroscopy in the far-infrared region (FarIR) as an alternative method for the characterisation of natural resins. To this purpose, standards of natural resins belonging to four different categories (sesquiterpenic, i.e. elemi, shellac; diterpenic, i.e. colophony, Venice turpentine; diterpenic with polymerised components, i.e. copal, sandarac; triterpenic, i.e. mastic and dammar) used as paint varnishes have been analysed by FarIR spectroscopy in ATR mode. Discrimination between spectral data and repeatability of measurements have been magnified and verified using principal component analysis, in order to verify the effectiveness of the method in distinguishing the four resin categories. The same samples were analysed in the MidIR range, but the spectral differences between the different categories were not evident. Moreover, the method has been tested on historical samples from the painting “La Battaglia di Cialdiran” (sixteenth century) and from a gilded leather (seventeenth century). In the first case, FarIR spectroscopy allowed confirmation of the results obtained by analytical pyrolysis. In the latter, FarIR spectroscopy proved successfully, effective in the identification of the superficial resin layer that could not be detected with the bulk chromatographic analyses.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2015

Relationships between Chemical Characteristics and Phytotoxicity of Biochar from Poultry Litter Pyrolysis

Alessandro G. Rombolà; Giovanni Marisi; Cristian Torri; Daniele Fabbri; Alessandro Buscaroli; Michele Ghidotti; Andreas Hornung

Three biochars were prepared by intermediate pyrolysis from poultry litter at different temperatures (400, 500, and 600 °C with decreasing residence times) and compared with biochars from corn stalk prepared under the same pyrolysis conditions. The phytotoxicity of these biochars was estimated by means of seed germination tests on cress (Lepidium sativum L.) conducted in water suspensions (at 2, 5, and 40 g/L) and on biochars wetted according to their water-holding capacity. Whereas the seeds germinated after 72 h in water suspensions with corn stalk biochar were similar to the control (water only), significant inhibition was observed with poultry litter biochars. In comparison to corn stalk, poultry litter generated biochars with higher contents of ash, ammonium, nitrogen, and volatile fatty acids (VFAs) and a similar concentration of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). Results from analytical pyrolysis (Py-GC-MS) indicated that nitrogen-containing organic compounds (NCCs) and aliphatic components were distinctive constituents of the thermally labile fraction of poultry litter biochar. The inhibition of germination due to poultry litter biochar produced at 400 °C (PL400) was suppressed after solvent extraction or treatment with active sludge. A novel method based on solid-phase microextraction (SPME) enabled the identification of mobile organic compounds in PL400 capable of being released in air and water, including VFAs and NCCs. The higher phytotoxicity of poultry litter than corn biochars was tentatively attributed to hydrophilic biodegradable substances derived from lipids or proteins removable by water leaching or microbial treatments.


Bioresource Technology | 2015

Extraction of polyhydroxyalkanoates from mixed microbial cultures: Impact on polymer quality and recovery.

Chiara Samorì; Federica Abbondanzi; Paola Galletti; Loris Giorgini; Cristian Torri; Emilio Tagliavini

Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) can be extracted from mixed microbial cultures (MMCs) by means of dimethyl carbonate (DMC) or combination of DMC and sodium hypochlorite (NaClO). The protocol based on DMC, a green solvent never used before for the extraction of PHAs from MMC, allows an overall polymer recovery of 63%; also the purity and the molecular weight of the recovered polymers are good (98% and 1.2 MDa, respectively). The use of NaClO pretreatment before DMC extraction increases the overall PHA recovery (82%) but lowers the mean molecular weight to 0.6-0.2 MDa. A double extraction with DMC results to be the method of choice for the recovery of high quality PHAs from attractive but challenging MMCs.


Chemsuschem | 2013

Recycling nutrients in algae biorefinery

Laura Garcia Alba; Mathijs P. Vos; Cristian Torri; Daniele Fabbri; Sascha R.A. Kersten; Derk Willem Frederik Brilman

Algal fuel cells: Repeated nutrient recycling is demonstrated by reusing the aqueous phase obtained from the hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL) of microalgae. This is achieved, for the first time, by performing a complete set of four continuous growth–HTL cycles. Results show similar growth rates in each cycle, the potential of nutrient reduction, as well as cell morphology changes. This study demonstrates progress towards the standalone operation of algae biorefineries


Journal of Chromatography A | 2014

Fast procedure for the analysis of poly(hydroxyalkanoates) in bacterial cells by off-line pyrolysis/gas-chromatography with flame ionization detector

Cristian Torri; Helena Cordiani; Chiara Samorì; Lorenzo Favaro; Daniele Fabbri

Poly(hydroxyalkanoates) (PHAs) are polyesters formed by saturated short chain hydroxyacids, among which 3-hydroxybutanoic (HB) and 3-hydroxypentanoic (3-hydroxyvalerate, HV) are the most common monomers of homopolymers (e.g. poly(3-hydroxybutyrate), PHB) and copolymers (e.g. poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyhexanoate), PHB-HC). The most widely used approach for their determination is the polymer methanolysis followed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) analysis of the methylated monomers; this procedure generally requires the use of additional reagents (e.g. sulfuric acid) and is performed with harmful chlorinated solvents, such as chloroform. The development of fast routine solventless methods for the quantitative determination of PHAs and their monomeric composition is highly desirable to reduce sample pretreatment, speed up the analysis and decrease overall costs. It has been reported that under thermal treatment (e.g. pyrolysis, Py), PHAs are degraded in high yield (>40%, w/wPHA) into the corresponding 2-alkenoic acid (e.g. crotonic acid from PHB). This work aimed at investigating this reaction for direct analysis of PHAs in bacterial cells. The sample was directly subjected to pyrolysis and trapped pyrolysis products were analyzed by GC-FID. Off-line Py/GC-FID was first optimized on pure polymers with different monomer composition (PHB, PHB-HV, PHB-HC) and then applied to bacterial samples deriving from both mixed microbial cultures or selected strains, containing various types and amounts of PHAs. The Py/GC-FID method provided RSD <15% range, limit of detection of 100μg (1% PHAs in biomass), and results comparable to that of methanolysis (R(2)=0.9855), but with minimal sample pretreatment.

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