| Literature DB >> 35458371 |
Arjeta Kryeziu1,2, Václav Slovák1, Alžběta Parchaňská1.
Abstract
Cellulose is a renewable resource for the production of advanced carbonaceous materials for various applications. In addition to direct carbonization, attention has recently been paid to the preparation of porous carbons from liquid cellulose-based precursors. Possible pathways of cellulose conversion to a liquid state suitable for the preparation of porous carbons are summarized in this review. Hydrothermal liquefaction leading to liquid mixtures of low-molecular-weight organics is described in detail together with less common decomposition techniques (microwave or ultrasound assisted liquefaction, decomposition in a strong gravitation field). We also focus on dissolution of cellulose without decomposition, with special attention paid to dissolution of nonderivatized cellulose. For this purpose, cold alkalines, hot acids, ionic liquids, or alcohols are commonly used.Entities:
Keywords: carbon; cellulose; dissolution; liquefaction
Year: 2022 PMID: 35458371 PMCID: PMC9032830 DOI: 10.3390/polym14081621
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.967
Figure 1Schematic representation of biomass/cellulose liquefactions.
Figure 2Major components of pyrolytic bio-oil [29].
Figure 3Decomposition products during cellulose liquefaction.
Solvent used for biomass/cellulose HTL.
| Solvent | Conversion (%) | Temperature (°C) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| NaOH/H2O | 28–35 | 350 | [ |
| NaOH/H2O | 77 | 120–250 | [ |
| Urea/H2O | 100 | [ | |
| H2SO4/H2O | 85 | 150 | [ |
| H3PO4/H2O | 85 | 150 | [ |
| Citric acid/H2O | 65 | 100 | [ |
| Oxalic acid/H2O | 65 | 100 | [ |
| Glycerol | 60 | 100 | [ |
| Iso-propanol | 380 | [ | |
| 2-propanol | 32–49 | 240–320 | [ |
| 2-butanol | 27–53 | 240–320 | [ |
| Ethanol | 100 | 100–250 | [ |
| Methanol | 100 | 100–250 | [ |
| 1-octanol | 270 | [ | |
| Acetone | 60.5 | 299 | [ |
| Polyethylene glycol | 150 | [ | |
| Phenol | 130–150 | [ | |
| Dimethylsulfoxide | 100 | [ | |
| Ethylacetate | 100 | [ | |
| [Alkylmethylimidazolium]Cl | 75–90 | 120 | [ |
| [Bmim]Cl | 20 | 100 | [ |
| [Bmim]Ac | 11.5 | 50 | [ |
| [Amin]Cl | 3.5 | 100 | [ |
| [Emim]Cl | 10 | 100 | [ |
Figure 4Cellulose solvents.