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The chemical oxidation of lignin found in Sappi Saiccor dissolving pulp mill effluent
Author(s) -
Brenda Moodley,
Dulcie A. Mulholland,
HC Brookes
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
water sa
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.389
H-Index - 59
eISSN - 1816-7950
pISSN - 0378-4738
DOI - 10.4314/wsa.v38i1.1
Subject(s) - syringaldehyde , lignin , chemistry , vanillin , hydrogen peroxide , nitrobenzene , effluent , dissolving pulp , pulp (tooth) , pulp mill , organic chemistry , pulp and paper industry , catalysis , waste management , cellulose , medicine , pathology , engineering
Sappi Saiccor (situated in Durban, South Africa) dissolving pulp mill effluent, produced from an acid bisulphite pulping process, uses acacia and eucalyptus hardwoods to produce a unique and different blend of lignin that has not been previously studied. The chemical oxidation of lignin found in Sappi Saiccor’s effluent has been investigated using a number of different chemical oxidising agents, such as nitrobenzene, oxygen with and without the presence of a copper sulphate pentahydrate catalyst, and hydrogen peroxide. The reaction products were extracted with acid and identified using GC-MS and LC-MS techniques. Nitrobenzene is a good oxidising agent but tends to produce many toxic by-products and would not be acceptable on an industrial scale. Oxygen oxidation has previously been shown to produce aldehyde-type compounds, and in this work has produced good yields of both vanillin and syringaldehyde compared to previous oxygen oxidation reactions. Hydrogen peroxide is a strong oxidising agent that tends to over-oxidise the lignin during long reaction times.

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