Conversion of levulinic acid from various herbaceous biomass species using hydrochloric acid and effects of particle size and delignification

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Abstract

Acid catalyzed hydrothermal conversion of levulinic acid (LA) from various herbaceous materials including rice straw (RS), corn stover (CS), sweet sorghum bagasse (SSB), and Miscanthus (MS) was evaluated. With 1 M HCl, 150◦C, 5 h, 20 g/L solid loading, the yields of LA from untreated RS, CS, SSB and MS based on the glucan content were 60.2, 75.1, 78.5 and 61.7 wt %, respectively. It was also found that the particle size had no significant effect on LA conversion yield with >3 h reaction time. With delignification using simulated green liquor (Na2CO3-Na2S, 20 wt % total titratable alkali (TTA), 40 wt % sulfidity) at 200◦C for 15 min, lignin removal was in the range of 64.8-91.2 wt %. Removal of both lignin and xylan during delignification increased the glucan contents from 33.0-44.3 of untreated biomass to 61.7-68.4 wt % of treated biomass. Delignified biomass resulted in much lower conversion yield (50.4-56.0 wt %) compared to 60.2-78.5 wt % of untreated biomass. Nonetheless, the concentration of LA in the product was enhanced by a factor of ~1.5 with delignification.

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Pulidindi, I. N., & Kim, T. H. (2018). Conversion of levulinic acid from various herbaceous biomass species using hydrochloric acid and effects of particle size and delignification. Energies, 11(3). https://doi.org/10.3390/en11030621

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