Abstract

While there may be many reasons why very interesting science ideas never reach commercial practice, one of the more prevalent is that the reaction or process, which is scientifically possible, cannot be made efficient enough to achieve economic viability. One pathway to economic viability for many business sectors is the multi-product portfolio. Research, development, and deployment of viable biorefinery technology must meld sound science with engineering and business economics. It is virtually axiomatic that increased value can be generated by isolating relatively pure substances from heterogeneous raw materials. Woody biomass is a heterogeneous raw material consisting of the major structural components, cellulose, lignin, and hemicelluloses, as well as minor components, such as extractives and ash. Cellulose is a linear homopolymer of D-glucopyrano-units with β-D(1®4) connections and is the wood component most resistant to chemical and biological degradation. Lignin is a macromolecule of phenylpropanoid units, second to cellulose in bio-resistance, and is the key component that is sought for removal from woody biomass in chemical pulping. Hemicelluloses are a collection of heteropolysaccharides, comprised mainly of 5- and 6-carbon sugars. Extractives, some of which have high commercial value, are a collection of low molecular weight organic and inorganic woody materials that can be removed, to some extent, under mild conditions. Applied Biorefinery Sciences, LLC (a private, New York, USA based company) is commercializing a value-optimization pathway (the ABS Process™) for generating a multi-product portfolio by isolating and recovering homogeneous substances from each of the above mentioned major and minor woody biomass components. The ABS Process™ incorporates the patent pending, core biorefinery technology, “hot water extraction”, as developed at the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry (SUNY-ESF). Hot water extraction in the absence of mineral acids and bases is preferred because of its ability to generate multiple high value output products without chemical input, recovery, or disposal costs. Instead of added chemicals in the cooking phase, the ABS Process™ relies upon an autocatalytic reaction in which acetyl groups, bound through an ester linkage to hemicellulose chains, are hydrolyzed at high temperature in water. The resulting acidic conditions (final pH ~3.5) and temperatures of 160–170 °C permit further solubilization and diffusion of oligomeric 5- and 6-carbon sugars, acetic acid, aromatic substances, monomeric sugars, and other trace compounds into the extract solution. These conditions also avoid extensive degradation of monosaccharides, enabling membrane fractionation and other chemical separation techniques to be used in the following separations. A range of separation techniques are applied on the extract solution to isolate and purify fermentable sugars, acetic acid, lignin, furfural, formic acid, other hemicellulose related compounds, lignin, lignin degradation products, and phenolic extractives for commercial sale. The extracted lignocellulosic biomass, with reduced hemicellulose content and is thus less heterogeneous, carries the value-added advantages of: (1) enhanced product characteristics, and (2) reduced energy and chemical manufacturing costs. Thus, by fractionating woody biomass into more homogeneous substances, the ABS Process™ holds potential as an economically viable pathway for capturing sustainable, renewable value not currently realized from lignocellulosic biomass.

Highlights

  • Woody biomass is the most abundant organic source on Earth, with an annual production in the biosphere of about 5.64 × 1016 g of carbon [1]

  • Studies on the distribution of hemicelluloses in different softwood species indicate that even though the composition of different cell wall layers is similar, glucomannan content increases from the outer parts of the cell wall to the inner parts, whereas the arabino-4-O-methylglucuronoxylan content is very high in the S3 layer

  • Lignocellulosic biomass is a heterogeneous raw material consisting of the major structural components, cellulose, lignin, and hemicelluloses, as well as the minor components, extractives and ash

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Summary

Introduction

Woody biomass is the most abundant organic source on Earth, with an annual production in the biosphere of about 5.64 × 1016 g of carbon [1]. 2.7 × 1015 g of C/year were utilized by mankind, including food (1.7 × 1015 g of carbon); pulp, paper, energy, furniture and construction materials (0.9 × 1015 g of carbon); and the rest as clothing and chemicals [2]. Biomass through a natural process that uses solar energy to synthesize compounds from raw materials assimilated from Earth’s ecosystem. Woody biomass is a sustainable resource in that plant systems readily regenerate in native ecosystems, as well as in human influenced systems such as dedicated, managed wood product and energy crops (forest, agriforest, and/or agricultural biomass). Biorefinery processes that convert woody biomass to chemicals, energy and materials can be nominally classified as biochemical, thermochemical, and hydrothermal routes, this division is increasingly blurred as biological and thermal processes are mixed in many current-day applications (Figure 1). The hydro-thermal process lineage, (shown in Figure 1) is currently the process category most actively championed by ABS for commercial practice

Chemical Composition of Woody Biomass
Cellulose
Hemicelluloses
Distribution of Polysaccharides
Lignin
Extractives
Economically Viable Deconstruction and Utilization of Woody Biomass
The ABS ProcessTM
Partial List of Product Potentials
Wood Derived Products
Fermentation Products
Commercial Chemicals and Materials
Feedstock Supply
Findings
Conclusions and Discussions
Full Text
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