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Preparing prehydrolyzed kraft dissolving pulp via phosphotungstic acid prehydrolysis from grape branches
Author(s) -
Tao Li,
MAYING HUA,
ZHANG JUN KE
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
tappi journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.217
H-Index - 45
ISSN - 0734-1415
DOI - 10.32964/tj21.1.35
Subject(s) - dissolving pulp , chemistry , cellulose , pulp (tooth) , lignin , phosphotungstic acid , kraft paper , dissolution , fourier transform infrared spectroscopy , pulp and paper industry , kraft process , organic chemistry , chemical engineering , catalysis , medicine , pathology , engineering
Dissolving pulp was successfully prepared via phosphotungstic acid (PTA) prehydrolysis kraft (PHK) cooking followed by an elemental chlorine-free (ECF) bleaching process from grape branches. The effects of prehydrolysistemperature, reaction time, and PTA concentration that potentially affect the quality of dissolving pulp product on chemical components of pulp were studied via an orthogonal experiment. The structure of lignin was activated during the PTA prehydrolysis phase, and lignin was easily removed during the following cooking process. Thus, relatively mild conditions (140°C, 100 min) can be used in the cooking process. During the prehydrolysis phase, temperature exhibited the most significant influence on the cellulose purity of the obtained pulp fiber, followed by reactiontime and PTA concentration. The optimized prehydrolysis conditions were as follows: prehydrolysis temperature, 145°C; reaction time, 75 min; and PTA concentration, 1 wt%. Whether the excessively high prehydrolysistemperature or prolonging the reaction time did not favor the retention of long chain cellulose, the delignification selectivity for the cooking process could not be further improved by excessive PTA loading. Under these prehydrolysis conditions, 94.1% and 29.0% for α-cellulose content and total yield could be achieved after the given cooking and bleaching conditions, respectively. Moreover, the chemical structure and crystal form of cellulose were scarcely changed after PTA prehydrolysis, which could be confirmed by results from Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction (XRD). PTA prehydrolysis could be considered as an alternative method for preparing PHK dissolving pulp under relatively mild cooking conditions.

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