Catalyst design for biorefining

Karen Wilson*, Adam F. Lee

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The quest for sustainable resources to meet the demands of a rapidly rising global population while mitigating the risks of rising CO2 emissions and associated climate change, represents a grand challenge for humanity. Biomass offers the most readily implemented and low-cost solution for sustainable transportation fuels, and the only non-petroleum route to organic molecules for the manufacture of bulk, fine and speciality chemicals and polymers. To be considered truly sustainable, biomass must be derived fromresources which do not compete with agricultural land use for food production, or compromise the environment (e.g. via deforestation). Potential feedstocks include waste lignocellulosic or oil-based materials derived from plant or aquatic sources, with the so-called biorefinery concept offering the co-production of biofuels, platform chemicals and energy; analogous to today's petroleum refineries which deliver both high-volume/low-value (e.g. fuels and commodity chemicals) and lowvolume/ high-value (e.g. fine/speciality chemicals) products, thereby maximizing biomass valorization. This article addresses the challenges to catalytic biomass processing and highlights recent successes in the rational design of heterogeneous catalysts facilitated by advances in nanotechnology and the synthesis of templated porous materials, as well as the use of tailored catalyst surfaces to generate bifunctional solid acid/base materials or tune hydrophobicity.

Original languageEnglish
Article number20150081
JournalPhilosophical Transactions A
Volume374
Issue number2061
Early online date11 Jan 2016
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2016

Bibliographical note

Funding: EPSRC (EP/K000616/1, EP/F063423/1 and EP/G007594/3)

Keywords

  • biofuels
  • biorefining
  • heterogeneous catalysis
  • platform chemicals
  • porous materials
  • solid acids and bases

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