4.7 Article

Microwave radiation-assisted synthesis of levulinic acid from microcrystalline cellulose: Application to a melon rind residue

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DOI: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2023.124149

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Cellulose; Levulinic acid; Food waste

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Circular economy views waste as new raw materials for value-added products. Agroindustrial lignocellulosic waste can be a valuable source of platform chemicals like levulinic acid (LA). This study focuses on the microwave-assisted acidic conversion of microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) into LA, assessing the impact of catalysts, inorganic salt addition, and ball milling pre-treatment on LA yield. The optimal conditions resulted in a 48% LA yield, and these conditions were successfully applied to melon rind, achieving a 51% yield of LA.
The circular economy considers waste to be a new raw material for the development of value-added products. In this context, agroindustrial lignocellulosic waste represents an outstanding source of new materials and platform chemicals, such as levulinic acid (LA). Herein we study the microwave (MW)-assisted acidic conversion of microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) into LA. The influence of acidic catalysts, inorganic salt addition and ball -milling pre-treatment of MCC on LA yield was assessed. Depolymerization and disruption of cellulose was monitored by FTIR, TGA and SEM, whereas the products formed were analyzed by HPLC and NMR spectroscopy. The parameters that afforded the highest LA yield (48 %, 100 % selectivity) were: ball-milling pre-treatment of MCC for 16 min at 600 rpm, followed by MW-assisted thermochemical treatment for 20 min at 190 degrees C, aqueous p-toluenesulfonic acid (p-TSA) 0.25 M as catalyst and saturation with KBr. These optimal conditions were further applied to a lignocellulosic feedstock, namely melon rind, to afford a 51 % yield of LA. These results corroborate the suitability of this method to obtain LA from agroindustrial wastes, in line with a circular economy-based approach.

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