Fractionation and characterization of solubilized biopolymers from alkaline pulping liquors
The conversion of lignocellulosic biomass to renewable liquid fuels or chemicals offers one approach to decrease dependence on fossil fuels. Attempts at commercializing the biochemical production of biofuels from lignocellulose has been hindered by the costs associated with pretreatment, enzyme production, and feedstock transportation. The infrastructure established by the forest products industry offers a way to decrease initial capital costs, and to generate new products and revenue from an industry showing declined profits. This work addresses two general themes of applying alkaline pulping chemistries to: (1) extract, separate, and recover chemically altered non-cellulosic biopolymers from woody biomass and (2) evaluate the impact that the removal of non-cellulosic biopolymers have on the yields of monomeric sugars by enzymatic hydrolysis. These general themes were addressed through three studies. First, bench scale alkali extractions performed on a variety of hardwoods indicated that hemicellulose and lignin extractability was dependent on biomass species, which in turn were related to initial composition and properties of the cell walls. Ethanol precipitation could recover the hemicellulose fraction and following precipitate bleaching the recovered material yielded 65-80% hemicellulose, depending on biomass source. Molecular weight characterization of the recovered hemicellulose by size-exclusion chromatography (SEC) indicated the presence of lignin and carbohydrates eluting at the 3-12 kDa range, and the application of novel reducing end quantification estimated the number average degree of polymerization (DPN) would reach an asymptotic limit of 25 for switchgrass and 120 for silver birch. The high extraction yields of hemicellulose identified conditions that could be utilized to remove hemicellulose prior to chemical pulping or during alkaline pretreatments. Lignin characterization was performed on fractions generated from a softwood kraft black liquor to determine the properties of solubilized lignin that resulted in their phase-partitioning behavior during a novel acidification process using CO2. A bulk of the lignin precipitated between a pH of 11.6 to 10.0, with fractions obtained at higher pH contaminated by larger quantities of aliphatic extractives and polysaccharides. Lignin fractions were characterized for functional groups by 1H and 13C NMR, molecular weight by gel-permeation chromatography (GPC), and lignin monomer generation by analytical pyrolysis-GC/MS. Select structural and chemical properties of the lignin fractions were correlated based on their linear dependencies to relate phase-partitioning behavior with respect to pH.Lastly, alkaline pulping trials were conducted in a pressurized reactor vessel to determine hemicellulose and lignin dissolution during a soda pulping process and to understand how pulping conditions may impact hydrolysis yields. Hemicellulose dissolution increased up to 170°C followed by a decrease in the polysaccharide content of the black liquor, an effect of polysaccharide degradation and re-adsorption to the residual wood fibers. Lignin dissolution increased throughout the pulping trials, and at the most severe condition (1 hour at 170°C) only 10% of the lignin remained in the woody biomass. The alkaline pulping trials also produced a digestible substrate that generated over an 80% yield of monomeric glucose.
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- In Collections
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Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Copyright Status
- In Copyright
- Material Type
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Theses
- Authors
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Stoklosa, Ryan Joseph
- Thesis Advisors
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Hodge, David B.
- Committee Members
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Dale, Bruce E.
Saffron, Christopher M.
Lee, Ilsoon
- Date
- 2014
- Subjects
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Biomass conversion
Biomass energy
Chemical engineering
Hemicellulose
Lignocellulose--Biotechnology
- Program of Study
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Chemical Engineering - Doctor of Philosophy
- Degree Level
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Doctoral
- Language
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English
- Pages
- xiii, 142 pages
- ISBN
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9781321117691
1321117698
- Permalink
- https://doi.org/doi:10.25335/M5G78V