Catalytic Preparation and Value Addition of Renewable Chemical Intermediates from Carbohydrates
Date
2023
Authors
Bhat, Navya Subray
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
Adopting biomass-derived fuels and chemicals could help to relieve the
economic and environmental distresses triggered by the excessive use of petrofuels and
petrochemicals. Moreover, the suitable integration of biomass carbon in the chemical
industry would be a giant step toward their long-anticipated sustainability.
Carbohydrate-derived furfural (FUR), 5-(hydroxymethyl)furfural (HMF), and levulinic
acid (LA) have received significant attention over the past three decades as renewable
chemical platforms for the synthesis of a variety of biofuels and chemicals of
commercial significance. The elegant acid-catalyzed processes allow the selective
removal of excess oxygen atoms from the parent sugar molecules in the form of water
under energy-efficient conditions. The inherent instability in aqueous acid,
hydrophilicity, and poor thermal stability of HMF complicates its isolation from the
aqueous/polar reaction media and challenges the scalability of the process. In this
regard, the hydrophobic analogs of HMF have received significant interest as the
functional equivalent of HMF. 5-(Chloromethyl)furfural has also gained considerable
interest as a substitute for HMF and has shown promise as the hydrophobic congener
of HMF. Similarly, the esters of HMF, such as 5-(acyloxymethyl)furfural, are
particularly interesting since they are halogen-free, hydrolytically stable, and
hydrophobic analogs of HMF. The functionalities present in platform molecules are
exploited for selective synthetic transformations, preferably under catalytic conditions,
to make products of desired structural and functional characteristics. For example, the
Baeyer-Villiger oxidation of furanics, especially FUR to 2-furanone, remains largely
underexplored. The catalytic esterification or transesterification of biomass-derived
intermediates will lead to corresponding esters with potential applications as green
solvents, novel oxygenates, plasticizers, surfactants, and chemical reagents.
Carbohydrate-derived renewable chemicals are of academic and commercial interest.
Even incremental improvement in their yields and simplification of the processes for
their production will significantly benefit this area of research.
Description
Keywords
Renewable synthesis, Furfural, Alkyl esters, Isosorbide esters