Scholarly Work - Chemical & Biological Engineering
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://scholarworks.montana.edu/handle/1/8718
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Item Scale-Up of a Two-Stage Cu-Catalyzed Alkaline-Oxidative Pretreatment of Hybrid Poplar(American Chemical Society, 2024-03) Dülger, Dilara N.; Yuan, Zhaoyang; Singh, Sandip K.; Omolabake, Surajudeen; Czarnecki, Celeste R.; Nikafshar, Saeid; Li, Mingfei; Bécsy-Jakab, Villő E.; Park, Seonghyun; Park, Sunkyu; Nejad, Mojgan; Stahl, Shannon S.; Hegg, Eric L.; Hodge, David B.A two-stage alkaline-oxidative pretreatment of hybrid poplar was investigated at scale (20 L reactor volume) with the goal of understanding how reaction conditions as well as interstage mechanical refining impact downstream process responses. The pretreatment comprises a first stage of alkaline delignification (alkaline pre-extraction) followed by a second delignification stage employing Cu-catalyzed alkaline hydrogen peroxide with supplemental O2 (O2-enhanced Cu-AHP). Increasing pre-extraction severity (i.e., temperature and alkali loading) and pretreatment oxidation (increasing H2O2 loading) were found to increase mass and lignin solubilization in each stage. Lignin recovered from the first stage was subjected to oxidative depolymerization and led to aromatic monomer yields as high as 23.0% by mass. Lignins recovered from the second-stage Cu-AHP pretreatment liquors were shown to exhibit aliphatic hydroxyl contents more than 6-fold higher than a typical hardwood kraft lignin, indicating that these lignins could serve as a biobased polyol for a range of polyurethane applications.Item Composition analysis of canola and intermediate wheatgrass biomass and the effects of extraction(BioResources, 2023-01) Johnsrude, Lauren M.; Scheffel, Aidan J.; Allen, Brett L.; Wettstein, Stephanie G.Knowing the composition of biomass is critical for determining accurate yields of renewable chemicals and fuels; however, nonstructural components can affect the results of standard composition procedures, leading to inaccurate reactant amounts. To remove these nonstructural components, solvent extractions can be done, but the impact on composition values has not been well-reported. For this study, compositional analysis was performed on as-received canola (Brassica napus) and intermediate wheatgrass (Thinopyrum intermedium), as well as ethanol, water, and water/ethanol extracted biomasses. Water/ethanol extraction of the intermediate wheatgrass resulted in significantly lower xylose and both acid soluble and insoluble lignin amounts when compared to the as-received analysis. Since sugar was removed during the extractions, it is recommended to use the as-received composition values for glucuronoarabinoxylans; however, the extractives may interfere with the lignin analysis and therefore, the extracted lignin values are likely more reflective of the composition.