Interest in utilizing biorenewable feedstocks to produce fuels and chemicals has risen greatly in the past decade due to the economic, political and environmental concerns associated with diminishing petroleum reserves. A fundamental challenge lying ahead in the development of efficient processes to utilize biomass feedstock is that, unlike their petroleum counterparts, biomass contains an excess amount of oxygen. Therefore, catalytic strategies such as dehydration and hydrogenolysis amongst others have been extensively studied as platform technologies for deoxygenation. In this review, we primarily discuss the catalytic dehydration of C 6 carbohydrates to 5-hydroxymethylfurfural, which has attracted much attention due to the versatility of using furanic compounds as an important platform intermediate to synthesize various chemicals. The emphasis is on the fundamental mechanistic chemistry so as to provide insights for further catalyst/catalytic system design. After separately discussing fructose and glucose dehydration, this review summarizes recent progress with bi-functional catalyst systems for tandem glucose/fructose isomerization and subsequent fructose dehydration, thereby realizing highly selective HMF production directly from the more abundant and cheaper C 6 sugar feedstock, glucose.
Fast
pyrolysis of lignocellulosic biomass, utilizing moderate temperatures
ranging from 400 to 600 °C, produces a primary liquid product
(pyrolytic bio-oil), which is potentially compatible with existing
petroleum-based infrastructure and can be catalytically upgraded to
fuels and chemicals. In this work, experiments were conducted with
a micropyrolyzer coupled to a gas chromatography–mass spectrometry/flame
ionization detector system to investigate fast pyrolysis of neat cellulose
and other glucose-based carbohydrates. A detailed mechanistic model
building on our previous work was developed for fast pyrolysis of
neat glucose-based carbohydrates by integrating updated findings obtained
through experiments and theoretical calculations. The model described
the decomposition of cellulosic polymer chains, reactions of intermediates,
and formation of a range of low molecular weight compounds at the
mechanistic level and specified each elementary reaction step in terms
of Arrhenius parameters. The mechanistic model for fast pyrolysis
of neat cellulose included 342 reactions of 103 species, which included
96 reactions of 67 species comprising the mechanistic model of neat
glucose decomposition.
As biomass pyrolysis is a promising technology for producing renewable fuels, mechanistic descriptions of biomass thermal decomposition are of increasing interest. While previous studies have demonstrated that glucose is a key primary intermediate and have elucidated many important elementary mechanisms in its pyrolysis, key questions remain. For example, there are several proposed mechanisms for evolution of an important product and platform chemical, 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (5-HMF), but evaluation with different methodologies has hindered comparison. We evaluated a host of elementary mechanisms using a consistent quantum mechanics (QM) level of theory and reveal a mechanistic understanding of this important pyrolysis pathway. We also describe a novel route as a target for catalyst design, as it holds the promise of a more selective pathway to 5-HMF from glucose. We further demonstrate the effect of conformational and structural isomerization on dehydration reactivity. Additionally, we combined QM and experimental studies to address the question of whether only the reactions of β-D-glucose, the cellulose monomer, are relevant to biomass pyrolysis, or if α-D-glucose needs to be considered in mechanistic models of glucose and cellulose pyrolysis. QM calculations show notable differences in elementary mechanisms between the anomers, especially in levoglucosan formation, which provide a means for evaluating experimental yields of α-D-glucose and β-D-glucose pyrolysis. The combined data indicate that both anomers are accessible under pyrolysis conditions. The kinetic and mechanistic discoveries in this work will aid catalyst design and mechanistic modeling to advance renewable fuels from nonfood biomass.
A computational framework based on continuous distribution kinetics was constructed to solve the mechanistic model that was developed for fast pyrolysis of glucose-based carbohydrates in the first part of this study [Zhou et al. Ind. Eng. Chem. Res. 2014, 53.
The primary reactions and secondary
effects resulting from cellulose
fast pyrolysis were investigated using a micropyrolyzer system by
changing sample weight and length scale. To exclude the catalytic
effects from metal ions, all cellulose samples were demineralized
prior to pyrolysis. Heat transfer calculations estimated the characteristic
time scale for heat transfer to be 1 order of magnitude smaller than
the pyrolysis reaction time when the sample weight was less than 800
μg.
It was found that mass transfer limitations existed when the sample
weight of the powder cellulose was larger than 800 μg or when
the cellulose particles were pyrolyzed at a larger characteristic
length scale. The mass transfer limited system led to secondary reactions
including secondary char and gas formation from volatile products
and decomposition/dehydration of levoglucosan into low molecular weight
products, furans, and dehydrated pyranose. The secondary reactions
were found to be catalyzed by the char from cellulose pyrolysis. The
pyrolysis of powder celluloses of differing crystallinity, degree
of polymerization, and feedstock type were studied. Over 87 wt % mass
balance closure was achieved for each type of cellulose. Similar product
distributions were obtained for all of the different celluloses, implying
that the primary products from cellulose were not influenced by these
factors.
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