Effect of process parameters on woody biomass fractionation in a methanol/water mixture in a semi-flow reactor†
Abstract
The degradation of woody biomass in methanol/water mixtures at elevated temperatures and pressures is a promising candidate for chemical production from renewable resources, combining the wood-degrading ability of water with the product-dissolving capacity of methanol. However, the effects of water and methanol on wood degradation remain unclear. In the present study, the effect of process parameters on the degradation of Japanese cedar in methanol/water at 270 °C and 10–30 MPa was investigated using a semi-flow reactor in which pressure and temperature can be controlled independently. At 270 °C, hemicelluloses were degraded and solubilized more preferentially at 10 MPa, but delignification was more preferred at 20 and 30 MPa. In the resulting products, methylation of coniferyl alcohol from lignin and methyl esterification of methyl glucuronopentosan from hemicellulose were more advanced at 20 and 30 MPa than at 10 MPa. These results suggest that at 10 MPa the influence of water is dominant and promotes polysaccharide degradation, whereas at 20 and 30 MPa the influence of methanol is dominant and promotes delignification. Our findings will provide insight into the establishment of efficient chemical production from woody biomass with solvolysis technology.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Research advancing UN SDG 7: Affordable and clean energy