Parinaz Hafezisefata,
Elmin Rahicb and
Robert C. Brown*a
aDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011, USA. E-mail: rcbrown3@iastate.edu
bDepartment of Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011, USA
First published on 28th July 2025
A lignin-first biorefinery based on oxidative fractionation of lignocellulose is presented for the first time. Red oak was successfully delignified through alkaline oxidation yielding carbohydrate pulp and phenolic monomer-rich lignin oil. Process conditions for optimizing phenolic monomer yield, glucan retention in the pulp, and delignification were explored. The effect of temperature, oxygen partial pressure, time, catalyst, and sodium hydroxide concentration were assessed using a response surface statistical method. Two different operating windows were proposed to get the optimum results. Temperature and time were the most significant explanatory variables for all the response models. The presence of CuSO4 catalyst was of slight significance in the production of monomers if reaction time was short. Under optimum reaction conditions, the lignin oil consisted of around 40% phenolic monomers (mainly syringaldehyde and vanillin). The structural features of the lignin oil were further analyzed by GC/MS, GPC, and 2D HSQC NMR techniques. The isolated carbohydrate pulp retained approximately 97 wt% of the cellulose under optimum reaction conditions. Powder X-ray diffraction of the isolated carbohydrate pulp showed that the cellulose was of crystalline structure, indicating its potential for paper production. Enzymatic hydrolysis of the carbohydrate pulp converted 85% of the cellulose to glucose within 120 h, illustrating the potential of cellulosic ethanol production via this lignin-first strategy.
Many biorefinery approaches focus on conversion of lignocellulosic biomass to specific chemical products rather than converting the whole plant to bio-oil, which contains hundreds of different compounds. These approaches encourage fractionation of lignocellulose to its various components to reduce the complexity of downstream processing. The primary focus of most of these biorefineries is harvesting valuable products from carbohydrates, with lignin a subordinate constituent that is often treated as a by-product. This typically involves removing lignin from lignocellulose in the first stages of fractionation to facilitate carbohydrate recovery.2,3 Current delignification methods employ harsh reaction conditions to efficiently remove lignin. Under severe reaction conditions, lignin undergoes irreversible condensation reactions, producing recalcitrant lignin known as technical lignin.4 Technical lignin is used in low-value applications such as boiler fuels for heat and power generation.
Lignin is the only component of biomass that consists of aromatic structures, making it an attractive feedstock for production of aromatic compounds.5 Second-generation biorefineries are expected to increase the supply of extracted lignin.6–8 Technoeconomic and life cycle analysis of lignocellulosic biorefineries show that their economic viability and environmental sustainability will require lignin utilization.6 Unfortunately, due to the highly condensed structure of conventional biorefinery lignins (e.g., soda, kraft, sulfite), depolymerization of lignin to valuable chemicals and fuels is hampered.4 To retain the intrinsic values of native lignin, biorefineries will have to implement alternative methods to protect the native structure of lignin. Innovative depolymerization methods such as ammonia-based fractionation,9 γ-valerolactone-assisted hydrolysis,10 and mild organosolv techniques11 can substantially retain the native structure of lignin. In these methods, mild reaction conditions preserve lignin ether bonds, decreasing the extent of subsequent condensation reactions to less useful products. However, this can also result in low yields of isolated lignin. Harsher reaction conditions are required to increase the extent of delignification. Thus, there is a dichotomy between delignification yield and lignin product value.4
Unlike lignin, cellulose is less prone to depolymerization because of its crystalline structure. Therefore, it can be more easily recovered in later steps of the biorefinery. As a result, a “lignin-first” strategy has emerged for biorefineries in which the biomass is first processed to remove valuable lignin-derived molecules while carbohydrate remains in the biomass for later stages of processing.
Reductive catalytic fractionation (RCF) is a well-known lignin-first strategy. Lignin is thermally depolymerized in a solvent with reactive intermediate products immediately converted into stable phenolic monomers.12,13 Formaldehyde-assisted fractionation is another lignin-first strategy introduced by Luterbacher et al.14 to preserve the native structure of lignin during the acid-catalyzed delignification. Formaldehyde forms stable acetals with lignin reactive side-chains, which prevents lignin depolymerization and subsequent condensation reactions.
Most RCF methods use external hydrogen or hydrogen donor molecules to stabilize deconstruction products, which is a relatively expensive approach to recovering stable products.5 Moreover, separating the heterogeneous catalyst used in the process from carbohydrates is challenging. Van den Bosch et al.15 recommended using catalyst pellets in a basket to make catalyst separation easier. However, physical solid–solid contact between catalyst and reactants is problematic.16,17
Lignin isolation and depolymerization via oxidation is an intriguing alternative to reductive approaches to recovering lignin from biomass and producing processable carbohydrate pulp. Lignin oxidation produces a range of functionalized aromatic chemicals including carboxylic acids and aldehydes with significant economic value. Lignin oxidation has been performed under acidic and alkaline reaction conditions. Acidic solutions such as concentrated acetic acid,18 organic solvents,19 and inorganic acids20,21 have been successfully used to depolymerize technical lignin such as kraft and organosolv to valuable chemicals like vanillin, methyl vanillate, vanillic acid, and syringaldehyde. Alkaline oxidation of lignin using molecular oxygen can selectively produce valuable chemicals such as vanillin and syringaldehyde in high yields. The vast majority of studies on alkaline lignin oxidation focus on technical lignin. Lignosulfonates,22–24 kraft lignin,25,26 and steam explosion lignin are among the most studied condensed lignin substrates. Phenolic monomer yields from these processes are generally low, ranging from 1.5 wt% to around 20 wt%.24
Although one-step oxidation of biomass to phenolic monomers and cellulose is an intriguing approach from both economic and environmental standpoints, it has received less attention. Processing the lignin portion of biomass into aromatic aldehydes while preserving carbohydrates under alkaline oxidation conditions is challenging since there is a trade-off between delignification and carbohydrate retention in the pulp.27 Traditional oxidation of biomass is performed in nitrobenzene28 under strongly alkaline conditions and high temperatures with reaction times of 2–4 hours. Such harsh reaction conditions achieve complete conversion and solubilization of the biomass. More recently, Tarabanko et al.29 studied the alkaline oxidation of pine wood. They obtained around 18 wt% phenolic monomer yield at 160 °C in the presence of 1 M NaOH at 0.3 MPa oxygen after 25 min. The cellulose yield of the remaining solid was modest (63.9% of the initial wood's cellulose), which is either related to the reaction condition or the very long heating and cooling time of the reactor (heating time: 20–53 min; cooling time: 50−105 min). Beckham et al.30 studied the alkaline oxidation of native poplar with the goal of increasing phenolic monomer yield. They obtained around 30 wt% phenolic monomer yield (including about 7 wt% non-oxidative products such as p-coumaric acid) in 2 M NaOH at 175 °C and 5 bar oxygen with 10 mg LaMn0.8Cu0.2O3 catalyst after 30 min. Although phenolic monomer yield was relatively high, other aspects such as carbohydrate retention in the pulp, delignification, and further processing opportunities of the solid pulp were not described.
This paper explores an approach to oxidative fractionation of lignocellulose that selectively converts lignin to valuable chemicals while achieving efficient delignification and high glucan retention in the remaining pulp. In this study, CuSO4 was used as a catalyst. Compared to other copper complexes, CuSO4 is an excellent choice of catalyst form due to its good solubility in water, allowing water to be used as a reaction solvent.31 Additionally, CuSO4 can be separated from low molecular weight products and reused through simple extraction after the depolymerization reaction.31 A schematic diagram of the proposed lignin-first biorefinery is illustrated in Fig. 1. This study is a comprehensive investigation of reaction conditions affecting yields of desired products. A central composite response surface statistical model was used to evaluate selected explanatory variables and find the optimum reaction conditions.
The solid residue was separated from the liquid product by centrifuge (AccuSpin1, Fisher Scientific). The liquid was then neutralized with concentrated HCl to pH < 2 and extracted with ethyl acetate (3 × 5 ml). A rotovap was used to remove ethyl acetate. The recovered lignin oil was collected for analysis. The solid residue was mixed with DI water and acidified with concentrated HCl to dissolve the catalyst. The solid residue was washed with fresh DI water and dried at 105 ± 3 °C until a constant weight was achieved. Although not performed in this study, the CuSO4 catalyst could be recovered through acidification with sulfuric acid and precipitation.
The compositional analysis of biomass (red oak) and the solid residues obtained after the reaction was carried out using the NREL procedure which is briefly described in the ESI.†
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Fig. 2 Inscribed central composite design space. Levels are coded as follows: 0 for center points, −1/+1 for cube points, and −α, +α for axial points. |
Explanatory variable | −α | −1 | 0 | +α | +1 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Temperature (°C) | 120 | 145 | 170 | 195 | 220 |
Time (min) | 4 | 18 | 32 | 46 | 60 |
O2 pressure (psi) | 40 | 80 | 120 | 160 | 200 |
NaOH (M) | 0.5 | 0.87 | 1.25 | 1.62 | 1.94 |
Catalyst (wt%) | 0 | 9.6 | 19.2 | 28.8 | 38.5 |
The influence of each explanatory variable on phenolic monomer yield, delignification, and glucan retention in the pulp was evaluated with the goal of maximizing these response variables. Although delignification is expected to be maximized when phenolic monomer yield is maximized, it was included in the model as a response variable.
JMP 15 Pro was used for data analysis and regression fitting. Response variables were fitted with a regression curve including quadratic terms, linear terms, interaction terms and an intercept. Although the full model with all the combinations showed a good fit with the data, a reduced model was applied to remove some insignificant terms (p-value >0.3) to improve R2 and adjusted R2. Residuals versus actual data plots and residual versus predicted plots showed random scatter (Fig. S1–S6†). The experiment at 220 °C (α, 0, 0, 0, 0) did not produce enough solid residue to do the compositional analysis on it, so it was ultimately removed from the model.
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GPC analysis was performed to assess the molecular weight distribution of lignin oil. Ten milligrams of lignin oil were dissolved in 5 ml tetrahydrofuran and filtered with a glass microfiber syringe filter (0.45 μm) before transferring to the GPC vial. GPC analysis was performed using a Dionex Ultimate 3000 (Sunnyvale, CA) HPLC system, equipped with a Shodex refractive index (RI). Two Agilent columns, PLgel 3 μm 100 Å 300 × 7.5 mm (p/n PL1110-6320) and one Mesopore 300 × 7.5 mm (p/n PL1113-6325) column were used. Tetrahydrofuran was used as an eluent, and the instrument was calibrated from 162–45120 g mol−1. The software used to control the instrument and evaluate the samples was Dionex Chromeleon version 6.8.
NMR analysis was performed with a Bruker Biospin NEO 400 MHz spectrometers equipped with liquid-nitrogen cooled 5 mm Prodigy Probe with typical geometry (broadband coil closest to the sample). Bruker's Topspin 3.5 software was used to process spectra. The central solvent peak was used as the internal reference (δH/δC: DMSO-d6, 2.49/39.50). For the HSQC NMR experiment, 20 mg lignin oil was dissolved in a 500 mL solution of DMSO-d6 and pyridine-d5 (4:
1, v/v). The Bruker standard pulse sequence ‘hsqcedetgpsisp2.2’ was used with the following parameters: 12 ppm sweep width in F2 (1H), centered at 5.5 ppm, acquiring 3366 data points, 220 ppm sweep width centered at 105 ppm in F1 (13C) acquiring 620 increments, 20 scans per increment, a 1.0 s relaxation delay, and with the evolution time set for a 1-bond 1H–13C coupling constant of 145 Hz, with a total acquisition time of ∼5 h. Peak assignment was performed according to the literature.32
Enzymatic hydrolysis of the cellulose product was performed according to the NREL LAP Low Solids Enzymatic Saccharification of Lignocellulosic Biomass, with only slight modification.33 Cellulase enzymes from T. Reesei ATCC 26921 (Sigma-Aldrich) with cellulase activity of 210 FPU mL−1 based on the NREL standard cellulase activity assay for filter paper units were used for enzymatic hydrolysis.34 In short, biomass loadings were set at 1% (w/v) in 0.1 M sodium citrate buffer (pH 4.8) supplemented with 0.1 mg L−1 ampicillin to further minimize bacterial fermentation. Enzyme loading was kept at 30 FPU g−1 biomas.35 Incubation and hydrolysis were performed in an Innova 4000 Incubator Shaker (New Brunswick Scientific) set at 50 °C and 200 RPM for 5 days. Samples for glucose analysis were taken approximately every 24 hours, with subsequent centrifugation, filtration, and preservation at −20 °C prior to analysis. Glucose analysis was performed using the Thermo Fisher Scientific/Dionex Ultimate 3000 HPLC. Further details on this method can be found in a previous study.33
Response | Summary of fit | ANOVA | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mean | RSME | R squared | p-Value | F-Ratio | Significant | |
Phenolic monomer yield | 23.86 | 4.6 | 0.86 | 0.0012 | 5.55 | YES |
Glucan retention | 84.99 | 6.23 | 0.82 | 0.0027 | 4.59 | YES |
Delignification | 89.2 | 3.53 | 0.98 | <0.001 | 39.04 | YES |
As shown in Fig. 3, reaction temperature was a significant factor for all of the response variables when all other explanatory variables were at the center point (time: 32 min, O2 pressure: 120 psi, catalyst present: 19 wt%, NaOH: 1.25 M). Phenolic monomer yield, glucan retention, and delignification all showed quadratic relationships with temperature. The optimum temperature for maximum phenolic monomer yield, glucan retention, and delignification were 175 °C, 140 °C, and 200 °C, respectively. It is not surprising that glucan retention reached its maximum at lower temperatures: alkaline oxidation at high temperatures readily decomposes carbohydrate when other explanatory variables are not optimized.
Reaction time was the second most important explanatory variable for all the response variables. The univariate effect of time on all response variables is depicted in Fig. 4. While phenolic monomer yield and delignification showed quadratic relations with time, glucan retention had a negative linear correlation. A shorter reaction time preserved more cellulose which is consistent with the alkaline pulping process.36 When wood chips are exposed to high temperature and alkaline conditions, a shorter reaction time can produce stronger pulp.36 Phenolic monomer yield and delignification reached their maximum extent at around 33 min and 43 min, respectively, when other explanatory variables were kept constant at their center point (temperature: 170 °C, O2 pressure: 120 psi, catalyst: 19 wt%, NaOH: 1.25 M).
The interaction effect between reaction time and temperature was a significant explanatory variable for all three response variables, which shows the importance of decreasing the reaction time as reaction temperature increases. As shown in Fig. 5, at 120 °C the no monomers were produced for the first 20 min of reaction before increasing to its maximum yield at about 45 min. At 150 °C and 170 °C, monomers yield reached maximum yield after 32 min and 23 min, respectively, indicating the need for longer reaction times as temperature decreases. The decrease in phenolic monomer yield with longer reaction times is probably the result of monomers being oxidized to CO2, H2O, and CO.5
Fig. 6 illustrates the interaction of reaction time and temperature on glucan retention while other explanatory variables were kept constant at their center point. As shown in Fig. 6a, there is a negative correlation with time for all three temperatures, which means longer reaction times solubilize more carbohydrate. At 120 °C, glucan retention was still around 100 wt% after 15 min, but it was around 95 wt% and 60 wt% at 170 °C and 220 °C, respectively. As shown in the response surface plot (Fig. 6b), the same negative correlation was observed for all the other temperatures in the studied range.
Oxygen pressure was only statistically significant for phenolic monomer yield and glucan retention, but this term was included in all models in order to improve the overall fit with the data. The univariate model of the oxygen pressure on each response is shown in Fig. 7. Both phenolic monomer yield and glucan retention showed a negative linear correlation with oxygen pressure.
Increasing the oxygen pressure accelerates both product formation and degradation. It has been shown that oxidation products can experience deeper oxidation to light gases including H2O, CO2, and CO under oxidative conditions depending on the reaction conditions.5 Increasing oxygen concentration under alkaline reaction conditions could also destroy cellulose if other reaction conditions are not optimized. According to these data, it seems like oxygen has a negative effect on the response, but it is probably because of the high oxygen pressure range explored in this study.
Catalysts are thought to facilitate lignin oxidation by electron abstraction of the phenolate group to phenoxy radicals.37,38 Metal salts or metal oxides and noble metal catalysts are often used for the alkaline oxidation of lignin. Some studies show that catalyst accelerates product formation and increases the phenolic monomer yield,39,40 while other studies do not report any increase in the phenolic monomer yield.41 This inconsistency could be related to various reaction conditions applied in the alkaline oxidation process. In this study, CuSO4, the most common and one of the most effective catalyst for alkaline oxidation of lignin, was studied over a wide range of temperature, time, oxygen pressure, and NaOH concentration. As shown in Fig. 8, the catalyst was not a very significant explanatory variable for any of the responses when the rest of the explanatory variables were constant at their center point (temperature: 170 °C, time: 32 min, O2 pressure: 120 psi, NaOH: 1.25 M). Phenolic monomer yield and glucan retention showed minimal changes with catalyst concentration. There was a slightly positive relationship between catalyst and phenolic monomer yield, increasing the yield from 28 at zero level for the catalyst to 33 for 50 mg catalyst. Glucan retention showed a quadratic correlation with catalyst with a maximum of around 19 wt% catalyst loading. However, the changes are not that significant, and delignification rate did not show any significant change with catalyst concentration. Although the catalyst did not prove a significant explanatory variable, the interaction effect of catalyst and time showed that catalyst might increase phenolic monomer yield under certain reaction conditions. For instance, at a short reaction time, the catalyst showed a significant impact on phenolic monomer yield, increasing from 9 wt% to 24 wt% when it increases from 0 to 50 mg. On the other hand, at longer reaction time, the amount of catalyst did not affect phenolic monomer yield. These results are consistent with other studies that found the use of a catalyst accelerates the reaction and eventually increases phenolic monomer yield.34,35 Therefore, adding catalyst is beneficial for shorter reaction times, but the same yield can be achieved at longer reaction time without catalyst (Fig. 9).
However, it should be noted that at high temperatures, phenolic monomers are rapidly produced but also quickly decompose through oxidative degradation.30 Therefore, the time of the reaction is a critical explanatory variable to preserve produced monomers. Under these circumstances, adding catalyst is the best way to increase the phenolic monomer yield.
NaOH was a significant explanatory variable for phenolic monomer yield and glucan retention. The univariate effect of NaOH on the phenolic monomer yield and glucan retention is illustrated in Fig. 10. They both showed quadratic relationships with a maximum around 1.25 M NaOH while keeping other explanatory variables constant at their center points (temperature: 170 °C, time: 32 min, O2 pressure: 120 psi, catalyst: 19 wt%). NaOH provides a key role in oxidative depolymerization of lignin. It ionizes the hydroxyl group of lignin, allowing oxygen to attack the hydroxyl group and promote oxidation.32
If lower temperatures and longer reaction times are preferred, additional NaOH must be employed, but adding catalyst is unnecessary (as discussed earlier). When NaOH and oxygen pressure are held constant at 40 psi and 2 M, the white area includes the optimum reaction conditions.
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Fig. 13 Gas chromatogram and phenolic monomer yield of the lignin-oil produced from alkaline oxidation of red oak. (a): Reaction conditions 170 °C, 40 psi oxygen, 19.2 wt% catalyst, 1.25 M NaOH, 32 min, (b): reaction conditions are summarized in Table 3. |
Entry | T (°C) | T (min) | O2 (psi) | Cat (wt%) | NaOH (M) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 195 | 18 | 80 | 28.8 | 0.875 |
2 | 195 | 46 | 160 | 28.8 | 0.875 |
3 | 170 | 60 | 120 | 19.2 | 1.25 |
4 | 170 | 32 | 40 | 19.2 | 1.25 |
5 | 145 | 18 | 160 | 28.8 | 0.875 |
6 | 145 | 46 | 80 | 9.6 | 1.625 |
7 | 120 | 32 | 120 | 19.2 | 1.25 |
GPC profile of lignin oil produced under optimum reaction conditions is depicted in Fig. 14. It shows two peaks near 200 Da and 350 Da, suggesting successful depolymerization to mostly monomers and dimers. The sharp signal at 200 Da corresponds to benzaldehydes (vanillin and syringaldehyde), as confirmed by authentic samples.
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Fig. 14 Molecular weight distribution of lignin oil produced from red oak under oxidation conditions. Reaction conditions: 170 °C, 40 psi oxygen, 19.2 wt% catalyst, 1.25 M NaOH, 32 min. |
The lignin oil was further characterized by two-dimensional (2D) heteronuclear single quantum coherence (HSQC) NMR. The aromatic region of the HSQC spectra (Fig. 15a) shows signals of guaiacyl and syringyl groups. Oxidized guaiacyl and syringyl groups (S′2/6 and G′2) are more prominent due to the formation of benzaldehydes in high yield (vanillin and syringaldehyde), which is consistent with the GC results (Fig. 13). As shown in Fig. 15b, δH/δC in the ranges 3.5–5.5 ppm and 70–90 ppm does not show any peaks, indicating that most of the ether bonds in the resinol, β-O-4, and phenylcoumaran structures have been broken. Fig. 15a also displays the aldehyde region (side-chain part of the spectrum) for δH/δC in the ranges of 9–10.2 ppm and 188–195 ppm.
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Fig. 15 HSQC NMR spectra of lignin oils obtained under alkaline oxidation conditions. Reaction conditions: 170 °C, 40 psi oxygen, 19.2 wt% catalyst, 1.25 M NaOH, 32 min. |
Powder X-ray diffraction patterns were recorded at room temperature by using a Rigaku Ultima IV X-ray diffractometer. The X-ray diffraction patterns of the original red oak and isolated carbohydrate pulps after the oxidation process are depicted in Fig. 16. The results indicate the presence of crystalline cellulose before and after the process. These results suggest that isolated carbohydrates are suitable for paper production.
The enzymatic hydrolysis of the original red oak and the isolated carbohydrate pulp after the oxidation reaction (170 °C, 40 psi oxygen, 219.2 wt% catalyst, 1.25 M NaOH) was performed according to NREL procedure with minor modifications. As shown in Fig. 17 recalcitrance of the cellulose in the pulp was drastically reduced after the pretreatment. Glucose yield of the pretreated red oak was around 85% after 120 h of hydrolysis while it was only around 5 wt% for untreated red oak. This shows the possibility of producing fermentable sugars from isolated carbohydrate pulp obtained from this pretreatment process.
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Fig. 17 Cellulose saccharification efficiency for isolated pulp collected after the pretreatment (reaction condition: 170 °C, 40 psi oxygen, 19.2 wt% catalyst, 1.25 M NaOH) and unreacted red oak. |
For balanced performance—maximizing phenolic monomer yield while retaining cellulose and achieving high delignification—optimum conditions were found between 160–180 °C and 33–45 minutes, with 1.25 M NaOH, CuSO4 catalyst at 25 mg, and oxygen pressure at 40 psi. In this reaction space, modeled outcomes predicted monomer yields of >35 wt%, glucan retention >97 wt%, and delignification >95%. These predictions were validated experimentally, yielding 39 wt% phenolic monomers, 96% glucan retention, and 99% delignification at 170 °C, 30 min. This confirms that high lignin depolymerization and cellulose recovery can be simultaneously achieved without excessive degradation of the carbohydrate fraction.
Alternatively, if lower temperatures and longer residence times are preferred—e.g., for energy savings or thermal sensitivity—similar performance can be reached by increasing NaOH dosage (e.g., to 2 M), even in the absence of a catalyst. In this condition space, glucan retention and monomer yields remain high, though reaction efficiency may be slightly reduced.
The resulting carbohydrate pulp retained crystalline cellulose structure, as confirmed by powder X-ray diffraction, and achieved 85% glucose conversion via enzymatic hydrolysis within 120 hours. These findings underscore the flexibility and potential of this oxidative lignin-first approach for integrated production of aromatic monomers, paper-grade pulp, or bioethanol feedstocks.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d4re00413b |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2025 |