4.6 Article

Hydrolysis of regenerated cellulose from ionic liquids and deep eutectic solvent over sulfonated carbon catalysts

Journal

RSC ADVANCES
Volume 13, Issue 12, Pages 8153-8162

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2ra08224a

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Efficient hydrolysis of cellulose is crucial for the cost-effective production of biofuels and biochemicals. This study investigated the feasibility of using ionic liquids (ILs) and deep eutectic solvents (DES) for the dissolution/regeneration (DR) of cellulose as an alternative to ball-milling pretreatment. The results showed that cellulose pretreatment using ILs and DES had superior kinetics for hydrolysis compared to conventional ball milling, suggesting the potential for replacing the high energy-demanding ball-milling process with the energy-saving DR process.
The efficient hydrolysis of cellulose into its monomer unit such as glucose or valuable cello-oligosaccharides is the critical step for the cost-effective production of biofuels and biochemicals. However, the current cellulose hydrolysis process involves high energy-demanding pretreatment (e.g., ball-milling) and long reaction times (>24 h). Herein, we investigated the feasibility of the dissolution/regeneration (DR) of cellulose in ionic liquids (ILs) and deep eutectic solvent (DES) as an alternative to ball-milling pretreatment for the effective hydrolysis of cellulose. Because chlorine-based solvents were reported to be the most active for cellulose pretreatment, [EMIM]Cl and [DMIM]DMP were selected as the IL molecules, and choline chloride-lactic acid and choline chloride-imidazole were selected as the DES molecules. The level of the crystallinity reduction of the regenerated cellulose were analyzed using XRD and SEM measurements. The hydrolysis kinetics of the regenerated cellulose from ILs and DES were examined at 150 degrees C using sulfonated carbon catalysts and compared with those of the ball-milled cellulose. Overall, the cellulose pretreatment using the ILs and the DES had superior kinetics for cellulose hydrolysis to the conventional ball milling treatment, suggesting a possibility to replace the current high energy-demanding ball-milling process with the energy-saving DR process. In addition, the utilization of supercritical carbon dioxide-induced carbonic acid as an in situ acid catalyst for the enhanced hydrolysis of cellulose was presented for the first time.

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