4.8 Article

Debottlenecking a Pulp Mill by Producing Biofuels from Black Liquor in Three Steps

Journal

CHEMSUSCHEM
Volume 14, Issue 11, Pages 2414-2425

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/cssc.202100496

Keywords

biofuels; organocatalysis; lignin; hydrothermal synthesis; pulp mill

Funding

  1. Swedish Energy Agency

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By using mild reagents for esterification and recycling acetic anhydride and acetic acid, lignin is successfully converted into lignin esters for fuel production, thereby increasing the efficiency of pulp production.
By extracting lignin, pulp production can be increased without heavy investments in a new recovery boiler, the typical bottleneck of a pulp mill. The extraction is performed by using 0.20 and 0.15 weight equivalents of CO2 and H2SO4 respectively. Herein, we describe lignin esterification with fatty acids using benign reagents to generate a lignin ester mixable with gas oils. The esterification is accomplished by activating the fatty acid and lignin with acetic anhydride which can be regenerated from the acetic acid recycled in this reaction. The resulting mass balance ratio is fatty acid/lignin/acetic acid (2 : 1 : 0.1). This lignin ester can be hydroprocessed to generate hydrocarbons in gasoline, aviation, and diesel range. A 300-hour continuous production of fuel was accomplished. By recirculating reagents from both the esterification step and applying a water gas shift reaction on off-gases from the hydroprocessing, a favorable overall mass balance is realized.

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