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Recent Advances in Hydrotreating of Pyrolysis Bio-Oil and Its Oxygen-Containing Model Compounds

688

Citations

145

References

2013

Year

TLDR

Renewable energy research focuses on lignocellulosic biomass as a cost‑effective source of fuels, but converting its high‑oxygen, complex pyrolysis bio‑oil into liquid hydrocarbons via hydrotreating remains challenging due to catalyst stability and feedstock quality issues. This review surveys literature from the past decade on advances in hydrodeoxygenation chemistry of bio‑oil and its model compounds, primarily on noble metal catalysts. The authors analyze published studies on HDO reactions of phenolics, furans, and carboxylic acids over noble metal catalysts to elucidate reaction mechanisms and catalyst performance.

Abstract

Considerable worldwide interest exists in discovering renewable energy sources that can substitute for fossil fuels. Lignocellulosic biomass, the most abundant and inexpensive renewable feedstock on the planet, has a great potential for sustainable production of fuels, chemicals, and carbon-based materials. Fast pyrolysis integrated with hydrotreating, one of the simplest, most cost-effective, and most efficient processes to convert lignocellulosic biomass to liquid hydrocarbon fuels for transportation, has attracted significant attention in recent decades. However, effective hydrotreating of pyrolysis bio-oil presents a daunting challenge to the commercialization of biomass conversion via pyrolysis-hydrotreating. Specifically, the development of active, selective, and stable hydrotreating catalysts is problematic due to the poor quality of current pyrolysis bio-oil feedstock (i.e., high oxygen content, molecular complexity, coking propensity, and corrosiveness). Significant research has been conducted to address the practical issues and provide fundamental understanding of hydrotreating and hydrodeoxygenation (HDO) of bio-oils and their oxygen-containing model compounds, including phenolics, furans, and carboxylic acids. A wide range of catalysts have been studied, including conventional Mo-based sulfide catalysts and noble metal catalysts. Noble metal catalysts have been the primary focus of recent research because of their excellent catalytic performances and because they do not require the use of environmentally unfriendly sulfur. Recently, the reaction mechanisms of the HDO of model compounds on noble metal catalysts and their efficacy for hydrotreating or stabilization of bio-oil have been reported. This review provides a survey of relevant literature, published over the past decade, reporting advances in the understanding of the HDO chemistry of bio-oils and their model compounds, mainly on noble metal catalysts.

References

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