Production of 5 - (Halomethyl) Furfurals from Cellulosic Biomass and their Synthetic Upgrading into Renewable Chemicals
Date
2020
Authors
Sharath, B. O.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
The transportation fuels and most of the bulk and fine chemicals are primarily
sourced from crude oil. However, the excessive use of crude oil has depleted the
reserves, created a disparity between the demand and supply, and degraded the
environment. In search of a renewable and preferably carbon-neutral source, biomass
has found by many as a commercially-feasible replacement for fossilized carbon. The
chemocatalytic valorization of biomass is of particular interest since they are fast,
biomass agnostic, selective, and can potentially be integrated into the existing
infrastructure. A major challenge in the chemocatalytic value addition of biomass is to
develop a new generation of robust, selective, inexpensive, and environment-friendly
catalysts that can selectively deconstruct the biopolymers. In this regard, the acidcatalyzed depolymerization and dehydration of biomass-derived carbohydrates (e.g.,
cellulose) into furanics is an elegant way of removing excessive functionalities from
the carbohydrate. Biomass-derived 5-(hydroxymethyl)furfural (HMF), 5-
(chloromethyl)furfural (CMF), furfural and levulinic acid (LA) have been used as
renewable chemical building blocks for further value addition into fuels and specialty
chemicals. In this thesis work, an improved synthesis of CMF and LA have been
reported using aqueous HCl as the acid catalyst in the presence of quaternary
ammonium chloride as a surface-active agent (SAA). The SAA afforded noticeably
higher yields of CMF and LA compared to the control reactions. The reactions were
optimized on various reaction parameters such as temperature, duration, loading of the
substrate, and the loading of SAA. The SAA was successfully recovered and recycled.
LA was converted into alkyl levulinates, a potential diesel additive and a renewable
solvent, in the presence of phosphotungstic acid as an environment-friendly and
recyclable catalyst. Alkyl levulinates were also prepared by the alcoholysis of CMF and
furfuryl alcohol using HClO4-SiO2 as an inexpensive heterogeneous catalyst. A scalable
and high-yielding preparation of 5-(alkoxymethyl)furfural, a novel fuel oxygenate,
from CMF has also been reported.
Description
Keywords
Department of Chemistry, Alkyl levulinate, Biofuels, Biomass, Carbohydrates, Catalysis, Green Chemistry, Renewable Synthesis, Surface active agent