Abstract

Lignin polymer is biologically and chemically stable and requires highly vigorous conditions for de-polymerization, and subsequent stabilization of the monomeric conversion products to prevent re-polymerization and char production. The Lignin-to-Liquid (LtL) process is a solvolytic conversion of lignin with formic acid. Formic acid has been shown to both catalyze the de-polymerization and supply hydrogen that stabilizes the de-polymerization products. In this paper, lignin from Eucalyptus wood was used as the feedstock, and the LtL-process was performed in both aqueous and ethanolic solvent systems. The experimental variables were different levels of loading in the reactor, stirred and non-stirred conditions, and different reaction temperatures. The bio-oil consisted mostly of phenolic compounds, and the bio-oil yields differed with type of the solvent used, level of loading in the reactor, stirring condition, and operating temperature. More than 55 wt.% of the lignin was recovered as bio-oil at 320 °C at stirred conditions when the reactor was loaded at high level. Overall, the ethanolic solvent together with maximum level of loading in the reactor under stirred condition resulted in the highest bio-oil yield. Elemental balance data for bio-oil and char yields and the molecular composition of the bio-oils were also investigated using, respectively, elemental analysis and GC-MS. Finally, principal component analysis was used as well to systematically explore the relationship between the bio-oil and char yields and the reaction conditions.

Highlights

  • Environmental preservation is one of the major concerns in the 21st century

  • The feedstock used in this work, termed as Eucalyptus lignin, was a lignin rich residue isolated through the application of weak acid and enzymatic hydrolysis of Eucalyptus, at the Biorefinery Demo Plant (BDP) located in Ӧrnskӧldsvik, Sweden

  • This study was aimed at providing an insight into the yield and composition of the products generated through an LtL-process using a 5-L pilot scale at different reaction conditions

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Summary

Introduction

Environmental preservation is one of the major concerns in the 21st century. Population growth, increasing living standards, increasing industrialization, and the motorization of the world have led to a steep rise in energy and fossil fuel consumption. Utilization of biomass as a renewable and sustainable raw material for production of biofuels and other value-added chemicals through a biorefinery approach has recently received a great deal of attention as a promising alternative to fossil resources (Cherubini and Jungmeier, 2010; Bu et al, 2012; Kim et al, 2013). A biorefinery system comprises optimal and sustainable use of the renewable resources where the incoming raw material is completely converted into a range of products with high values (Kleinert and Barth, 2008; Gasson et al, 2010; Oregui-Bengoechea et al, 2015)

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