4.7 Article

Catalytic hydroprocessing of stubborn lignin in supercritical methanol with Cu/CuMgAlOx catalyst

Journal

FUEL PROCESSING TECHNOLOGY
Volume 218, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuproc.2021.106869

Keywords

Lignin; Hydrogenolysis; Hydrodeoxygenation; Non-noble catalyst; Mechanism

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFB1501500]

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This study investigates the depolymerization of stubborn lignin (SL) using Cu/CuMgAlOx catalyst in supercritical methanol, achieving a monomer yield of 37.76% with cyclohexanols identified as the major products. Various analytical techniques confirm the depolymerization of SL and upgrading of its derivatives. Computational determinations of activation energies, chemisorption energies, and bond dissociation energies support the experimental results, providing insights into the cleavage of stubborn linkages within SL.
Stubborn lignin (SL) is the thermochemically stable fragment generated from biomass utilization (e.g., pyrolysis, hydrolysis, fermentation, pulping), which is comparatively difficult to be further depolymerized into value-added bio-products. The cleavage of the stubborn linkages within the structure of SL, such as C-C, a-O-4, and 4-O-5 linkages, is the key for its valorization. Herein, we investigated the depolymerization of SL through catalytic hydroprocessing in supercritical methanol with Cu/CuMgAlOx catalyst. The yield of monomers reached 37.76C% with 240 min at 300 degrees C. Cyclohexanols were identified as the major monomeric products, indicating the occurrence of hydrodeoxygenation and hydrogenation. GPC, quantitative 13C NMR, HSQC NMR, and HMBC NMR analyses evidenced the depolymerization of SL and upgrading of its derivatives. Furthermore, the mechanistic studies were carried out to provide insights to the stubborn linkage cleavages. The degrees of difficulty to break up the three involved linkages obeyed the sequence of beta-5 > 4-O-5 > alpha-O-4. The apparent activating energies (Ea), chemisorption energies (Ec), and bond dissociation energies (BDE) were determined computationally to support the experimental results from the perspectives of kinetics, chemisorption, and thermodynamics, respectively. This research provides a reliable way for the utilization of SL.

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