From biomass to fuels: a carbon-efficient route combining ketalization and fluid catalytic cracking

One of the best ways to reduce the carbon footprint is to convert second-generation biomass (s-BM) into fuels in oil refineries. However, s-BM is not suitable for conventional processing. To circumvent this problem, we first converted s-BM under mild conditions in the presence of acetone into a stab...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sustainable energy & fuels 2024-03, Vol.8 (6), p.1329-1337
Hauptverfasser: Carvalho, Juliana, Vieira, Alessandra, Magalhães, Alviclér, Mariz e Miranda, Leandro S, Lam, Yiu Lau, Pereira, Marcelo M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:One of the best ways to reduce the carbon footprint is to convert second-generation biomass (s-BM) into fuels in oil refineries. However, s-BM is not suitable for conventional processing. To circumvent this problem, we first converted s-BM under mild conditions in the presence of acetone into a stable non-corrosive liquid, which we call bio-petroleum ( BP ). This process did not result in carbon loss, and the BP exhibited a reduced number of parallel reactions during its further transformation. This article describes the results of co-processing BP with vacuum gasoil up to high amounts (75 wt%) through fluidized catalytic cracking (FCC). A small amount of unwanted coke was observed, while 70-79% green carbon was incorporated into products like LPG and gasoline. Feed mixtures up to 35 wt% BP produced drop-in fractions of green hydrocarbons to LPG, gasoline, and petrochemical feedstocks. With higher amounts of BP , the mixtures produced high added-value products. We employed this approach as a starting point to produce carbon-neutral fuels. One of the best ways to reduce the carbon footprint is to convert second-generation biomass (s-BM) into fuels in oil refineries.
ISSN:2398-4902
2398-4902
DOI:10.1039/d4se00131a