Cargando…

Novel Route to Produce Hydrocarbons from Woody Biomass Using Molten Salts

[Image: see text] The thermochemical decomposition of woody biomass has been widely identified as a promising route to produce renewable biofuels. More recently, the use of molten salts in combination with pyrolysis has gathered increased interest. The molten salts may act as a solvent, a heat trans...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sridharan, Balaji, Genuino, Homer C., Jardan, Daniela, Wilbers, Erwin, van de Bovenkamp, Henk H., Winkelman, Jozef G. M., Venderbosch, Robbie H., Heeres, Hero J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2022
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9589755/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36304983
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.energyfuels.2c02044
_version_ 1784814370724773888
author Sridharan, Balaji
Genuino, Homer C.
Jardan, Daniela
Wilbers, Erwin
van de Bovenkamp, Henk H.
Winkelman, Jozef G. M.
Venderbosch, Robbie H.
Heeres, Hero J.
author_facet Sridharan, Balaji
Genuino, Homer C.
Jardan, Daniela
Wilbers, Erwin
van de Bovenkamp, Henk H.
Winkelman, Jozef G. M.
Venderbosch, Robbie H.
Heeres, Hero J.
author_sort Sridharan, Balaji
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] The thermochemical decomposition of woody biomass has been widely identified as a promising route to produce renewable biofuels. More recently, the use of molten salts in combination with pyrolysis has gathered increased interest. The molten salts may act as a solvent, a heat transfer medium, and possibly also a catalyst. In this study, we report experimental studies on a process to convert woody biomass to a liquid hydrocarbon product with a very low oxygen content using molten salt pyrolysis (350–450 °C and atmospheric pressure) followed by subsequent catalytic conversions of the liquids obtained by pyrolysis. Pyrolysis of woody biomass in molten salt (ZnCl(2)/NaCl/KCl with a molar composition of 60:20:20) resulted in a liquid yield of 46 wt % at a temperature of 450 °C and a molten salt/biomass ratio of 10:1 (mass). The liquids are highly enriched in furfural (13 wt %) and acetic acid (14 wt %). To reduce complexity and experimental issues related to the production of sufficient amounts of pyrolysis oils for further catalytic upgrading, model studies were performed to convert both compounds to hydrocarbons using a three-step catalytic approach, viz., (i) ketonization of acetic acid to acetone, (ii) cross-aldol condensation between acetone and furfural to C(8)–C(13) products, followed by (iii) a two-stage catalytic hydrotreatment of the latter to liquid hydrocarbons. Ketonization of acetic acid to acetone was studied in a continuous setup over a ceria–zirconia-based catalyst at 250 °C. The catalyst showed no signs of deactivation over a period of 230 h while also achieving high selectivity toward acetone. Furfural was shown to have a negative effect on the catalyst performance, and as such, a separation step is required after pyrolysis to obtain an acetic-acid-enriched fraction. The cross-aldol condensation reaction between acetone and furfural was studied in a batch using a commercial Mg/Al hydrotalcite as the catalyst. Furfural was quantitatively converted with over 90% molar selectivity toward condensed products with a carbon number between C(8) and C(13). The two-stage hydrotreatment of the condensed product consisted of a stabilization step using a Ni-based Picula catalyst and a further deep hydrotreatment over a NiMo catalyst, in both batch setups. The final product with a residual 1.5 wt % O is rich in (cyclo)alkanes and aromatic hydrocarbons. The overall carbon yield for the four-step approach, from pinewood biomass to middle distillates, is 21%, assuming that separation of furfural and acetic acid after the pyrolysis step can be performed without losses.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9589755
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher American Chemical Society
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-95897552022-10-25 Novel Route to Produce Hydrocarbons from Woody Biomass Using Molten Salts Sridharan, Balaji Genuino, Homer C. Jardan, Daniela Wilbers, Erwin van de Bovenkamp, Henk H. Winkelman, Jozef G. M. Venderbosch, Robbie H. Heeres, Hero J. Energy Fuels [Image: see text] The thermochemical decomposition of woody biomass has been widely identified as a promising route to produce renewable biofuels. More recently, the use of molten salts in combination with pyrolysis has gathered increased interest. The molten salts may act as a solvent, a heat transfer medium, and possibly also a catalyst. In this study, we report experimental studies on a process to convert woody biomass to a liquid hydrocarbon product with a very low oxygen content using molten salt pyrolysis (350–450 °C and atmospheric pressure) followed by subsequent catalytic conversions of the liquids obtained by pyrolysis. Pyrolysis of woody biomass in molten salt (ZnCl(2)/NaCl/KCl with a molar composition of 60:20:20) resulted in a liquid yield of 46 wt % at a temperature of 450 °C and a molten salt/biomass ratio of 10:1 (mass). The liquids are highly enriched in furfural (13 wt %) and acetic acid (14 wt %). To reduce complexity and experimental issues related to the production of sufficient amounts of pyrolysis oils for further catalytic upgrading, model studies were performed to convert both compounds to hydrocarbons using a three-step catalytic approach, viz., (i) ketonization of acetic acid to acetone, (ii) cross-aldol condensation between acetone and furfural to C(8)–C(13) products, followed by (iii) a two-stage catalytic hydrotreatment of the latter to liquid hydrocarbons. Ketonization of acetic acid to acetone was studied in a continuous setup over a ceria–zirconia-based catalyst at 250 °C. The catalyst showed no signs of deactivation over a period of 230 h while also achieving high selectivity toward acetone. Furfural was shown to have a negative effect on the catalyst performance, and as such, a separation step is required after pyrolysis to obtain an acetic-acid-enriched fraction. The cross-aldol condensation reaction between acetone and furfural was studied in a batch using a commercial Mg/Al hydrotalcite as the catalyst. Furfural was quantitatively converted with over 90% molar selectivity toward condensed products with a carbon number between C(8) and C(13). The two-stage hydrotreatment of the condensed product consisted of a stabilization step using a Ni-based Picula catalyst and a further deep hydrotreatment over a NiMo catalyst, in both batch setups. The final product with a residual 1.5 wt % O is rich in (cyclo)alkanes and aromatic hydrocarbons. The overall carbon yield for the four-step approach, from pinewood biomass to middle distillates, is 21%, assuming that separation of furfural and acetic acid after the pyrolysis step can be performed without losses. American Chemical Society 2022-10-11 2022-10-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9589755/ /pubmed/36304983 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.energyfuels.2c02044 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Sridharan, Balaji
Genuino, Homer C.
Jardan, Daniela
Wilbers, Erwin
van de Bovenkamp, Henk H.
Winkelman, Jozef G. M.
Venderbosch, Robbie H.
Heeres, Hero J.
Novel Route to Produce Hydrocarbons from Woody Biomass Using Molten Salts
title Novel Route to Produce Hydrocarbons from Woody Biomass Using Molten Salts
title_full Novel Route to Produce Hydrocarbons from Woody Biomass Using Molten Salts
title_fullStr Novel Route to Produce Hydrocarbons from Woody Biomass Using Molten Salts
title_full_unstemmed Novel Route to Produce Hydrocarbons from Woody Biomass Using Molten Salts
title_short Novel Route to Produce Hydrocarbons from Woody Biomass Using Molten Salts
title_sort novel route to produce hydrocarbons from woody biomass using molten salts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9589755/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36304983
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.energyfuels.2c02044
work_keys_str_mv AT sridharanbalaji novelroutetoproducehydrocarbonsfromwoodybiomassusingmoltensalts
AT genuinohomerc novelroutetoproducehydrocarbonsfromwoodybiomassusingmoltensalts
AT jardandaniela novelroutetoproducehydrocarbonsfromwoodybiomassusingmoltensalts
AT wilberserwin novelroutetoproducehydrocarbonsfromwoodybiomassusingmoltensalts
AT vandebovenkamphenkh novelroutetoproducehydrocarbonsfromwoodybiomassusingmoltensalts
AT winkelmanjozefgm novelroutetoproducehydrocarbonsfromwoodybiomassusingmoltensalts
AT venderboschrobbieh novelroutetoproducehydrocarbonsfromwoodybiomassusingmoltensalts
AT heeresheroj novelroutetoproducehydrocarbonsfromwoodybiomassusingmoltensalts