A reductive lignocellulose fractionation in a flow-through system in which pulping and transfer hydrogenolysis steps were separated in time and space has been developed.
A reductive fractionation process for the valorization of Quercus suber bark toward hydrocarbons in gasoline and diesel ranges and optionally 4-ethylguaiacol has been developed. The procedure involves three steps: (1) tandem hydrogen-free Pd/C-catalyzed transfer hydrogenolysis of lignin where the carbohydrates serve as an inherent hydrogen donor under slightly alkaline conditions to also facilitate the depolymerization of suberin, (2) optional distillation, to isolate the 4-ethylguaiacol, (3) hydrodeoxygenation of the mixture from the first step by a Pt-MoO 3 /TiO 2 catalyst generated hydrocarbons in gasoline and diesel ranges. The yield of 4-ethylguaiacol (90% purity) is 2.6% of dry bark weight (12% of acid insoluble lignin), and yield of hydrocarbon bio-oil is 42% of dry bark weight. This corresponds to a theoretical maximum yield of 77% for lignin and suberin. The carbon yield of the obtained bio-oil is thereby 64% from the total initial bark.
Birch bark was converted to a hydrocarbon biofuel through solubilization and hydrotreatment. The procedure implements a recyclable, salt- and metal-free solvent system and has been evaluated by Life-Cycle Assessment.
The interaction of fragments derived from lignin depolymerization with a heterogeneous palladium catalyst in methanol-water solution is studied by means of experimental and theoretical methodologies. Quantum chemistry calculations and molecular dynamics simulations based on the ReaxFF approach are combined effectively to obtain an atomic level characterization of the crucial steps of the adsorption of the molecules on the catalyst, their fragmentation, reactions, and desorption. The main products are identified, and the most important routes to obtain them are explained through extensive computational procedures. The simulation results are in excellent agreement with the experiments and suggest that the mechanisms comprise a fast chemisorption of identified fragments from lignin on the metal interface accompanied by bond breaking, release of some of their hydrogens and oxygens to the support, and eventual desorption depending on the local environment. The strongest connections are those involving the aromatic rings, as confirmed by the binding energies of selected representative structures, estimated at the quantum chemistry level. The satisfactory agreement with the literature, quantum chemistry data, and experiments confirms the reliability of the multilevel computational procedure to study complex reaction mixtures and its potential application in the design of high-performance catalytic devices.
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