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Catalytic Hydrotreatment of Humins to Bio‐Oil in Methanol over Supported Metal Catalysts
Author(s) -
Cheng Ziwei,
Saha Basudeb,
Vlachos Dionisios G.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
chemsuschem
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.412
H-Index - 157
eISSN - 1864-564X
pISSN - 1864-5631
DOI - 10.1002/cssc.201801535
Subject(s) - humin , chemistry , catalysis , methanol , organic chemistry , yield (engineering) , furfural , hydrodeoxygenation , phenol , alkylation , phenols , noble metal , selectivity , fertilizer , materials science , humic acid , metallurgy
Valorization of humins, the polymeric byproducts formed during the acid‐catalyzed production of HMF (5‐hydroxymethylfurfural) or furfural, is necessary to improve process economics and make biorefineries viable. We report the one‐step catalytic hydrotreatment of humins in methanol to humin oil containing fully or partially deoxygenated compounds. First, we compare four commercial noble‐metal catalysts (Ru/C, Rh/C, Pt/C, and Pd/C). Aromatic hydrocarbons, phenols, and esters are the main products detected by GC. Rh/C achieves the best GC‐detectable oil yield and 75 % humins conversion in 3 h at 400 °C, 30 bar H 2 , and a catalyst‐to‐humins mass ratio of 1:10. High H 2 pressures and intermediate temperatures, reaction times, and catalyst loadings enhance GC‐detectable oil yields. In contrast, high temperatures and long reaction times enhance gasification. Aromatics and phenols are found at high temperatures and long reaction times, whereas esters are the major species at short reaction times and high catalyst loading. 13 C‐isotopic labeling studies confirm, for the first time, that methanol participates in the alkylation and esterification reactions to form aromatic, phenolic and ester products. The reactivity in isopropanol is also discussed.

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