A1 Journal article (refereed)
Brønsted and Lewis acid catalyzed conversion of pulp industry waste biomass to levulinic acid (2019)


Lappalainen, K., Kuorikoski, E., Vanvyve, E., Dong, Y., Kärkkäinen, J., Niemelä, M., & Lassi, U. (2019). Brønsted and Lewis acid catalyzed conversion of pulp industry waste biomass to levulinic acid. Bioresources, 14(3), 7025-7040. https://bioresources.cnr.ncsu.edu/resources/bronsted-and-lewis-acid-catalyzed-conversion-of-pulp-industry-waste-biomass-to-levulinic-acid/


JYU authors or editors


Publication details

All authors or editorsLappalainen, Katja; Kuorikoski, Eveliina; Vanvyve, Elise; Dong, Yue; Kärkkäinen, Johanna; Niemelä, Matti; Lassi, Ulla

Journal or seriesBioresources

eISSN1930-2126

Publication year2019

Volume14

Issue number3

Pages range7025-7040

PublisherDepartment of Forest Biomaterials, North Carolina State University

Publication countryUnited States

Publication languageEnglish

Persistent website addresshttps://bioresources.cnr.ncsu.edu/resources/bronsted-and-lewis-acid-catalyzed-conversion-of-pulp-industry-waste-biomass-to-levulinic-acid/

Publication open accessOpenly available

Publication channel open accessOpen Access channel

Publication is parallel published (JYX)https://jyx.jyu.fi/handle/123456789/65338


Abstract

Enormous amounts of fiber sludge are generated annually by the pulp industry as a by-product. As a cellulose-rich material, its current usage, mainly as fuel, is inefficient from a material efficiency point of view. This work studied the utilization of fiber sludge from a Finnish and a Swedish pulp mill as a potential feedstock to produce levulinic acid, a valuable platform chemical. The conversion experiments of fiber sludge to levulinic acid were performed in a microwave reactor with a mixture of H2SO4 and Lewis acid as the catalyst. The reaction conditions, which included reaction time and temperature as well as the H2SO4 and Lewis acid concentrations, were studied in detail. The highest levulinic acid yield, 56%, was obtained with Swedish fiber sludge after 60 min at 180 °C with the H2SO4 concentration of 0.3 mol/L and a CrCl3 concentration of 7.5 mmol/L which indicated that the fiber sludge had the potential to be used as feedstock for levulinic acid production.


Keywordsbiomass (industry)pulpingsludgeutilisationorganic compoundsacidsirradiationcatalysis

Free keywordsfiber sludge; levulinic acid; microwave irradiation; catalytic conversion; Brønsted acid; Lewis acid


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Ministry reportingYes

Reporting Year2019

JUFO rating1


Last updated on 2024-25-03 at 13:14