Patrick A. Johnston
Iowa State University
28 Papers
149 Citations
Patrick A. Johnston is an academic researcher from Iowa State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pyrolysis & Levoglucosan. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 28 publications.
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Papers
Comparison of in-situ and ex-situ catalytic pyrolysis in a micro-reactor system
TL;DR: The remarkably high yield of olefins from ex-situ CP indicates the potential of exploiting the process to preferentially produce oleFins as a primary product from biomass, with aromatics being the secondary products.
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Effect of catalyst contact mode and gas atmosphere during catalytic pyrolysis of waste plastics
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of plastic type, catalyst and feedstock contact mode, as well as the type of carrier gas on product distribution were investigated using a tandem micro-pyrolyzer.
203
Soy-castor oil based polyols prepared using a solvent-free and catalyst-free method and polyurethanes therefrom
Chaoqun Zhang,Ying Xia,Ruqi Chen,Seungmoo Huh,Patrick A. Johnston,Michael R. Kessler,Michael R. Kessler +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, bio-based polyols from epoxidized soybean oil and castor oil fatty acid were developed using an environmentally friendly, solvent-free/catalyst-free method.
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Continuous production of sugars from pyrolysis of acid-infused lignocellulosic biomass
Dustin L. Dalluge,Tannon Daugaard,Patrick A. Johnston,Najeeb Kuzhiyil,Mark M. Wright,Robert C. Brown +5 more
TL;DR: The feasibility of increasing sugar yield via AAEM passivation has not been previously demonstrated at the kilogram scale in a continuous flow reactor as discussed by the authors, but it has been shown that passivation of AAEM feedstocks can significantly increase the sugar yield.
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Production of clean pyrolytic sugars for fermentation.
TL;DR: The optimal candidate is NaOH overliming, which results in maximum growth measurements with the use of ethanol-producing Escherichia coli, and the effective removal of contaminants from the separated pyrolytic sugars to produce a substrate suitable for fermentation without hydrolysis.
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