A perspective on biomass-derived biofuels: From catalyst design principles to fuel properties

[Display omitted] •Production of biofuels not considering the desired fuel properties is inefficient.•The ‘fuel-property-first’ paradigm enables production of fit-for-purpose biofuels.•Catalytic processes considering the target fuel properties should be designed.•The new paradigm will be leveraged b...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hazardous materials 2020-12, Vol.400, p.123198-123198, Article 123198
Hauptverfasser: Kim, Yeonjoon, Thomas, Anna E., Robichaud, David J., Iisa, Kristiina, St. John, Peter C., Etz, Brian D., Fioroni, Gina M., Dutta, Abhijit, McCormick, Robert L., Mukarakate, Calvin, Kim, Seonah
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Production of biofuels not considering the desired fuel properties is inefficient.•The ‘fuel-property-first’ paradigm enables production of fit-for-purpose biofuels.•Catalytic processes considering the target fuel properties should be designed.•The new paradigm will be leveraged by recent advances in computational modeling. The hazards to health and the environment associated with the transportation sector include smog, particulate matter, and greenhouse gas emissions. Conversion of lignocellulosic biomass into biofuels has the potential to provide significant amounts of infrastructure-compatible liquid transportation fuels that reduce those hazardous materials. However, the development of these technologies is inefficient, due to: (i) the lack of a priori fuel property consideration, (ii) poor shared vocabulary between process chemists and fuel engineers, and (iii) modern and future engines operating outside the range of traditional autoignition metrics such as octane or cetane numbers. In this perspective, we describe an approach where we follow a “fuel-property first” design methodology with a sequence of (i) identifying the desirable fuel properties for modern engines, (ii) defining molecules capable of delivering those properties, and (iii) designing catalysts and processes that can produce those molecules from a candidate feedstock in a specific conversion process. Computational techniques need to be leveraged to minimize expenses and experimental efforts on low-promise options. This concept is illustrated with current research information available for biomass conversion to fuels via catalytic fast pyrolysis and hydrotreating; outstanding challenges and research tools necessary for a successful outcome are presented.
ISSN:0304-3894
1873-3336
DOI:10.1016/j.jhazmat.2020.123198