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Dive into the research topics where David P. Gamliel is active.

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Featured researches published by David P. Gamliel.


Bioresource Technology | 2014

Catalytic pyrolysis of miscanthus × giganteus in a spouted bed reactor.

Shoucheng Du; Yijia Sun; David P. Gamliel; Julia A. Valla; George M. Bollas

A conical spouted bed reactor was designed and tested for fast catalytic pyrolysis of miscanthus × giganteus over Zeolite Socony Mobil-5 (ZSM-5) catalyst, in the temperature range of 400-600 °C and catalyst to biomass ratios 1:1-5:1. The effect of operating conditions on the lumped product distribution, bio-oil selectivity and gas composition was investigated. In particular, it was shown that higher temperature favors the production of gas and bio-oil aromatics and results in lower solid and liquid yields. Higher catalyst to biomass ratios increased the gas yield, at the expense of liquid and solid products, while enhancing aromatic selectivity. The separate catalytic effects of ZSM-5 catalyst and its Al2O3 support were studied. The support contributes to increased coke/char formation, due to the uncontrolled spatial distribution and activity of its alumina sites. The presence of ZSM-5 zeolite in the catalyst enhanced the production of aromatics due to its proper pore size distribution and activity.


Bioresource Technology | 2015

Investigation of in situ and ex situ catalytic pyrolysis of miscanthus × giganteus using a PyGC–MS microsystem and comparison with a bench-scale spouted-bed reactor

David P. Gamliel; Shoucheng Du; George M. Bollas; Julia A. Valla

The objective of the present work is to explore the particularities of a micro-scale experimental apparatus with regards to the study of catalytic fast pyrolysis (CFP) of biomass. In situ and ex situ CFP of miscanthus × giganteus were performed with ZSM-5 catalyst. Higher permanent gas yields and higher selectivity to aromatics in the bio-oil were observed from ex situ CFP, but higher bio-oil yields were recorded during in situ CFP. Solid yields were comparable across both configurations. The results from in situ and ex situ PyGC were also compared with the product yields and selectivities obtained using a bench-scale, spouted-bed reactor. The bio-oil composition and overall product distribution for the PyGC ex situ configuration more closely resembled that of the spouted-bed reactor. The coke/char from in situ CFP in the PyGC was very similar in nature to that obtained from the spouted-bed reactor.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2018

A Bottle-Around-a-Ship Method to generate Hollow Thin-Shelled Particles Containing Encapsulated Iron Species with Application to the Environmental Decontamination of Chlorinated Compounds

Yang Su; Yingqing Wang; Olasehinde Owoseni; Yueheng Zhang; David P. Gamliel; Julia A. Valla; Gary L. McPherson; Vijay T. John

Thin-shelled hollow silica particles are synthesized using an aerosol-based process where the concentration of a silica precursor tetraethyl orthosilicate (TEOS) determines the shell thickness. The synthesis involves a novel concept of the salt bridging of an iron salt, FeCl3, to a cationic surfactant, cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB), which modulates the templating effect of the surfactant on silica porosity. The salt bridging leads to a sequestration of the surfactant in the interior of the droplet with the formation of a dense silica shell around the organic material. Subsequent calcination consistently results in hollow particles with encapsulated iron oxides. Control of the TEOS levels leads to the generation of ultrathin-shelled (∼10 nm) particles which become susceptible to rupture upon exposure to ultrasound. The dense silica shell that is formed is impervious to entry of chemical species. Mesoporosity is restored to the shell through desilication and reassembly, again using CTAB as a template. The mesoporous-shelled hollow particles show good reactivity toward the reductive dichlorination of trichloroethylene (TCE), indicating access of TCE to the particle interior. The ordered mesoporous thin-shelled particles containing active iron species are viable systems for chemical reaction and catalysis.


Applied Catalysis A-general | 2016

On the effectiveness of tailored mesoporous MFI zeolites for biomass catalytic fast pyrolysis

David P. Gamliel; Hong Je Cho; Wei Fan; Julia A. Valla


Applied Catalysis A-general | 2016

Coke formation of model compounds relevant to pyrolysis bio-oil over ZSM-5

Shoucheng Du; David P. Gamliel; Marcus Giotto; Julia A. Valla; George M. Bollas


Applied Catalysis A-general | 2015

Comparative study for low temperature water-gas shift reaction on Pt/ceria catalysts: Role of different ceria supports

Rishabh Jain; Altug S. Poyraz; David P. Gamliel; Julia A. Valla; Steven L. Suib; Radenka Maric


Journal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis | 2016

The effect of ZSM-5 catalyst support in catalytic pyrolysis of biomass and compounds abundant in pyrolysis bio-oils

Shoucheng Du; David P. Gamliel; Julia A. Valla; George M. Bollas


Energy technology | 2017

Bifunctional Ni-ZSM-5 Catalysts for the Pyrolysis and Hydropyrolysis of Biomass

David P. Gamliel; George M. Bollas; Julia A. Valla


Energy & Fuels | 2017

The Effects of Catalyst Properties on the Conversion of Biomass via Catalytic Fast Hydropyrolysis

David P. Gamliel; Laura Wilcox; Julia A. Valla


Microporous and Mesoporous Materials | 2017

Nickel impregnated mesoporous USY zeolites for hydrodeoxygenation of anisole

David P. Gamliel; Brian P. Baillie; Evan Augustine; Jason Hall; George M. Bollas; Julia A. Valla

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Julia A. Valla

University of Connecticut

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Shoucheng Du

University of Connecticut

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Altug S. Poyraz

University of Connecticut

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Evan Augustine

University of Connecticut

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Hong Je Cho

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Jason Hall

University of Connecticut

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Marcus Giotto

University of Connecticut

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