| Literature DB >> 29642602 |
Jiachuan Chen1, Armin Eraghi Kazzaz2, Niloofar AlipoorMazandarani3, Zahra Hosseinpour Feizi4, Pedram Fatehi5,6.
Abstract
Currently, lignin is mainly produced in pulping processes, but it is considered as an under-utilized chemical since it is being mainly used as a fuel source. Lignin contains many hydroxyl groups that can participate in chemical reactions to produce value-added products. Flocculants, adsorbents, and dispersants have a wide range of applications in industry, but they are mainly oil-based chemicals and expensive. This paper reviews the pathways to produce water soluble lignin-based flocculants, adsorbents, and dispersants. It provides information on the recent progress in the possible use of these lignin-based flocculants, adsorbents, and dispersants. It also critically discusses the advantages and disadvantages of various approaches to produce such products. The challenges present in the production of lignin-based flocculants, adsorbents, and dispersants and possible scenarios to overcome these challenges for commercial use of these products in industry are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: biorefining; chemical reaction; dispersants; flocculants; lignin; product analysis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29642602 PMCID: PMC6017259 DOI: 10.3390/molecules23040868
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Mechanisms of flocculation: (a) charge neutralization; (b) patching; and (c) bridging.
Lignin-based flocculants used in different fields.
| Lignin Type | Application | Charge Density meq/g | MW (g/mol) | Modification | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pulping sludge containing lignin | Wastewater | N/A | 510,000 | Amination with triethylamine | [ |
| Kraft lignin from black liquor | Dye removal | N/A | N/A | Grafting trimethyl quaternary ammonium salt | [ |
| Alkali lignin | Dye removal | N/A | N/A | Grafting trimethyl quaternary ammonium salt and along with sodium alginate | [ |
| Thermomechanical pulping lignin (76 wt. % lignin) | Dye removal | −3.02 | 6270 | Nitric acid oxidation | [ |
| Hydrolysis lignin | Dye removal | +1.79 | 2669 | Dimethylamine-acetone-formaldehyde copolymer grafting, Mannich reaction | [ |
| +2.11 | 2762 | ||||
| +2.55 | 6143 | ||||
| Papermaking sludge (45–50 wt. % lignin and 5–10 wt. % cellulose) | Wastewater | N/A | 1000 | Acrylamide graft copolymerization | [ |
| Softwood kraft lignin | Dye removal | +1.10 | 21,600 | Cationization with GTMAC | [ |
| Softwood kraft lignin | Dye removal | −4.61 | 18,300 | Oxidation and sulfomethylation | [ |
N/A: not available.
Figure 2Reaction scheme for producing crosslinked amine-based sludge flocculant [34]. The sludge contained mainly lignin and hence the structure of lignin was selected to represent sludge as the raw material in this reaction.
Lignosulfonate as a flocculant in different areas.
| Application as a Flocculant | Modification | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Wastewater containing furfural | Radiation polymerization with olefins monomers | [ |
| oil sands | No modification, but applied along with polyacrylamide-based polymers | [ |
| Wastewater | Grafting with acrylamide and chitosan | [ |
NA: not available.
Lignin potential in heavy metal removal.
| Material | Adsorbent | Adsorption Capacity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pb(II) | Wheat straw lignin | 85% | [ |
| Cr(III) + Pb, Cr(III) + Cu, Cr(III) + Zn, Cr(III) + Cd | Isolated lignin from black liquor | ≥90% | [ |
| Cr(VI) | Kraft lignin | 33.33 mg/g | [ |
| Cr(VI) | Alkali lignin | 65 mg/g | [ |
| Cu + Ni | Kraft lignin | ≥80% | [ |
| Fe(III) | Wheat straw lignin | 100% | [ |
| Cu(II) | Wheat straw lignin | 35 mg/g | [ |
| Cd(II) | Alkynylated lignin | 87.4 mg/g | [ |
| Pb(II) | Aminated/esterified alkali lignin | 120 mg/g | [ |
| Cu(II) | Aminated sulfomethylated lignin | ≥60% | [ |
|
| Fe-Aminated lignin complex | ≥90% | [ |
| Al(III) | Crosslinked lignocatechol | 80% | [ |
|
| Lignin-polyaniline | 1556.8 mg/g | [ |
| Cu(II) | Lignin-melamine formaldehyde | 73.2 mg/g | [ |
Figure 3Mechanism of adsorbents in adsorbing ions.
Figure 4Schematic reaction mechanism of thiol-yne alkynylation lignin [69].
Lignin as an adsorbent for dye removal.
| Material | Adsorbent | Adsorption Capacity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brilliant Red HE-3B dye | Wheat straw lignin | 10.17 mg/g | [ |
| Methylene Blue dye | Esterified Lignin | 31.23 mg/g | [ |
| Brilliant Red 2BE dye | Etherified lignin- | 73.6 mg/g | [ |
| Anthraquinonic dye | Chitosan-alkali lignin complex | ≥90% | [ |
| Procion Blue dye | Carboxymethylated lignin- | 73.52 mg/g | [ |
| Methylene Blue | Reticulated formic lignin | 34.12 mg/g | [ |
Lignin as an adsorbent in other chemicals.
| Material | Adsorbent | Adsorption Capacity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| TNT | Chlorinated aminated lignin | 55.7 mg/g | [ |
| 2-nitrophenol | Hydrolysis lignin | 1.8 mg/g | [ |
| Bisphenol | Black liquor isolated lignin | 237.07 mg/g | [ |
| Metamitron, metribuzin pesticide | rot-wood lignin | 53% | [ |
| Dazomet/tiram pesticide | Indulin kraft lignin | 38–40% | [ |
| Hexazinone pesticide | Indulin kraft lignin | 47% | [ |
| Au(II) | Crosslinked lignophenol | ≥30% | [ |
| Au(III) | HCl mediated kraft lignin | 100% | [ |
| Au(III) | Aminated lignin | 100% | [ |
Proposed lignin-based dispersants for various fields.
| Lignin Type | Application | Charge Density (meq/g) | Molecular Weight (g/mol) | Modification | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hardwood kraft lignin | Cement admixture | −1.60 | 53,360 | Sulfomethylation | [ |
| Softwood kraft lignin | Stellar clay, cement, calcium carbonate and titanium dioxide | N/A | N/A | Ozone oxidation | [ |
| Softwood kraft lignin | Kaolin suspension | −2.2 | 14,825 | Oxidation | [ |
| Lignin N/A | Carbon nanotubes nanofluids | N/A | N/A | As is | [ |
| Straw alkali lignin | Dispersant for graphite suspension | N/A | N/A | Carboxymethylation | [ |
| Softwood kraft lignin | Dispersant for cement admixture | −3.8 | 18,299 | Oxidation and sulfomethylation | [ |
| Hardwood lignin | Kaolin suspension | (−)1.2–3.62 | 26,700–83,543 | Oxidation | [ |
| Hardwood kraft lignin | Kaolin suspension | 1.80 | 29,960 | Carboxymethylation | [ |
| Kraft lignin | Dimethomorph suspension | N/A | 18,061–29,201 | Grafting poly(ethylene glycol) functionalized with epichlorohydrin using BF3-Et2O | [ |
| Wheat straw kraft lignin | Cement admixture | N/A | 25,700 | Sulfonation | [ |
| Wheat straw alkali lignin | Cement admixture | N/A | 9688 | Hydroxymethylation and sulfonation | [ |
| Pinewood alkali lignin | Dye suspension | N/A | 11,020 | Hydroxypropylation and sulfonation | [ |
| Spruce alkali lignin | Multiwalled carbon nanotubes | N/A | 14,000 | As is | [ |
| Softwood kraft lignin | Multiwalled carbon nanotubes | N/A | 6500–7000 and 34,000–36,000 | Fractionization | [ |
| Wheat straw alkali lignin | TiO2 slurry | N/A | 17,400–35,700 | Sulfomethylation, horseradish peroxide utilization | [ |
| Esparto grass lignin | Cement admixture | N/A | 10,000 | Sulfonation | [ |
| Acid precipitated lignin | Cement admixture | N/A | N/A | Sulfonation | [ |
N/A: not available.
Figure 5Mechanism of dispersants in stabilizing particles in suspensions (a) surface charge density effect and (b) hydrophilicity effect.
Lignosulfonates as dispersants in various applications.
| Lignosulfonate Type | Application | Charge Density (meq/g) | Molecular Weight (g/mol) | Modification | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NA | Electroceramic suspensions | −0.061 ± 0.002 C/m2 | 37,000 | No modification | [ |
| NA | Gypsum paste | NA | 9000–62,000 | Hydroxymethylation, sulfonation, phenolation, sulfomethylation, arylsulfonation | [ |
| NA | Coal-water slurry | NA | 2000-17,000 | No modification | [ |
| Sodium lignosulfonate | Coal-water slurry | NA | less than 5000 to more than 50,000 | No modification | [ |
| Calcium lignosulfonate | Titanium dioxide suspension | NA | less than 1000—more than 30,000 | No modification | [ |
| Calcium lignosulfonate | Cement admixture | NA | NA | Oxidation, sulfomethylation, hydroxymethylation | [ |
| NA | Dimethomorph suspension | NA | Less than 1000—more than 30,000 | No modification | [ |
| Hardwood lignosulfonate | Cement admixture | NA | NA | No modification | [ |
| NA | Dimethomorph suspension | NA | 4800–160,000 | No modification | [ |
| Sodium lignosulfonate | Ceramic suspension | NA | 13,000 | No modification | [ |
| Sodium lignosulfonate | Concrete admixture | NA | 2378 and 23,650 | Oxidation, sulfomethylation | [ |
| NA | Dye suspension | NA | 9010–17,307 | No modification | [ |
| NA | Dimethomorph suspension | NA | 9600–35,500 | Oxidation, sulfonation | [ |
| NA | Carbendazim suspension | NA | 1900–13,120 | Sulfobutylation | [ |
| NA | Coal-water slurry | NA | 13,100–251,000 | Alkyl chain coupling polymerization | [ |
| Calcium, magnesium, sodium, potassium lignosulfonate | Cement admixture | NA | NA | No modification | [ |
NA: not available.
Figure 6Oxidation of softwood kraft lignin [96].