Abstract

Lignin content determination is an important task when pulp bleaching is studied. However, none of the conventional methods were developed for bleached pulps and therefore they are accurate mainly for unbleached pulps. This article describes a new, rapid method to determine lignin and hexenuronic acid contents of bleached hardwood kraft pulps based on UV resonance Raman (UVRR) spectroscopy. The lignin contents of pulp samples were determined from the aromatic band heights of the UVRR spectra. Therefore the measurements gave the content of aromatic lignin in pulp, and did not include extensively oxidized lignin structures. The method was applicable for hardwood kraft pulps with lignin content less than 1%. The measured lignin content correlated linearly with the kappa number. The lignin content (% on pulp) equaled 0.15κ+0.16. The constant 0.16 was presumably caused by the incomplete oxidation of the lignin in the kappa number determination. Klason lignin or total lignin determinations were not accurate for these kinds of pulps. Hexenuronic acid content was simultaneously determined from the UVRR band height of unsaturated C˭O and C˭C structures. The linear correlation of this band with hexenuronic acid indicated that the content of other unsaturated structures was constant in all the pulps, was proportional to the hexenuronic acid content of the pulps, or was insignificantly low. When compared to conventional methods, the UVRR spectroscopic method is fast, requires little sample and pretreatment, and the procedure has good repeatability. In addition, the accuracy of this technique increases with decreasing lignin content (<1%) making it a very attractive method for bleaching studies.

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