Abstract
Abstract Design of commercial scale processes for acid prehydrolysis of wood to useful products requires information on expected product yields under practical operating conditions. In this study, 650-gram batches of green southern red oak chips were hydrolyzed at 170°C. Particular attention was directed to conserving acid by low liquor-to-wood ratios, and to uniform acid distribution by vacuum impregnation. Carboxylate groups within the wood caused a significant, but unavoidable, loss of acid strength. As a consequence of this and other losses, satisfactory hydrolyses required 2.0 to 2.5% H2S0, for 5-minute impregnations. Long impregnations, which provided partial neutralization of the carboxylate groups, were hydrolyzed at equivalent rates by 0.47 to 0.73% H2S04. A 5-minute vacuum impregnation of green chips with 2.5% H2SO4, followed by a 6-minute hydrolysis, removed 81% of the wood xylose as xylose and xylose oligomers, and 10% as furfural. Hydrolyses after long acid impregnations produced more xylose ...
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