Utilization of Ionic Liquids in Lignocellulose Biorefineries as Agents for Separation, Derivatization, Fractionation, or Pretreatment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Susana PeleteiroJuan C Parajó

Abstract

Ionic liquids (ILs) can play multiple roles in lignocellulose biorefineries, including utilization as agents for the separation of selected compounds or as reaction media for processing lignocellulosic materials (LCM). Imidazolium-based ILs have been proposed for separating target components from LCM biorefinery streams, for example, the dehydration of ethanol-water mixtures or the extractive separation of biofuels (ethanol, butanol) or lactic acid from the respective fermentation broths. As in other industries, ILs are potentially suitable for removing volatile organic compounds or carbon dioxide from gaseous biorefinery effluents. On the other hand, cellulose dissolution in ILs allows homogeneous derivatization reactions to be carried out, opening new ways for product design or for improving the quality of the products. Imidazolium-based ILs are also suitable for processing native LCM, allowing the integral benefit of the feedstocks via separation of polysaccharides and lignin. Even strongly lignified materials can yield cellulose-enriched substrates highly susceptible to enzymatic hydrolysis upon ILs processing. Recent developments in enzymatic hydrolysis include the identification of ILs causing limited enzyme inhibition an...Continue Reading

References

Feb 7, 2002·Journal of the American Chemical Society·Eleanor D BatesJames H Davis
May 2, 2002·Journal of the American Chemical Society·Richard P SwatloskiRobin D Rogers
Mar 9, 2004·Biomacromolecules·Jin WuMeili Guo
Apr 22, 2004·Journal of the American Chemical Society·Cesar CadenaEdward J Maginn
Oct 20, 2005·Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering·Michiaki MatsumotoKazuo Kondo
May 31, 2007·Chemical Reviews·Avelino CormaAlexandra Velty
Oct 3, 2007·Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry·Ilkka KilpeläinenDimitris S Argyropoulos
Oct 10, 2007·Biotechnology Journal·Peter Dürre
Feb 6, 2008·Biotechnology Letters·Noriho KamiyaHaruo Takahashi
Sep 30, 2008·Journal of Biotechnology·Hua ZhaoVernecia N Person
Nov 26, 2008·Macromolecular Bioscience·Werner Mormann, Markus Wezstein
Dec 18, 2008·Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology·Eric P Knoshaug, Min Zhang
Dec 19, 2008·Biotechnology and Bioengineering·Sang Hyun LeeJonathan S Dordick
Jul 23, 2009·Macromolecular Bioscience·Sarah KöhlerThomas Heinze
Jan 26, 2010·Bioresource Technology·Indira P Samayam, Constance A Schall
Feb 12, 2010·Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry·Dongbao FuYukihiro Tamaki
Mar 3, 2010·Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America·Joseph B Binder, Ronald T Raines
Jun 1, 2010·The Journal of Physical Chemistry. B·Sayantan BoseJacob W Petrich
Jul 30, 2010·Bioresource Technology·Guillermo QuijanoAbdeltif Amrane
Jan 20, 2011·Biotechnology and Bioengineering·Kierston ShillHarvey W Blanch
Mar 4, 2011·Current Opinion in Biotechnology·Edward M Green
Sep 13, 2011·Bioresource Technology·Jinxing LongXuehui Li
Oct 29, 2011·Chemical Society Reviews·Roger A Sheldon
Jan 24, 2012·Chemical Society Reviews·Hui WangRobin D Rogers
Apr 4, 2012·Annual Review of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering·James H ClarkAvtar S Matharu
Aug 28, 2012·Biotechnology for Biofuels·Sergios Kimon KaratzosWilliam Orlando Sinclair Doherty
May 2, 2014·BMC Biotechnology·John GräsvikJyri-Pekka Mikkola
Mar 26, 2015·Plant Science : an International Journal of Experimental Plant Biology·Gea GuerrieroKhawar Sohail Siddiqui

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Citations

Dec 29, 2015·Bioresource Technology·Susana PeleteiroJuan Carlos Parajó
Aug 27, 2016·Carbohydrate Polymers·Susana PeleteiroJuan C Parajó
Sep 30, 2016·Chemical Reviews·Xingguang ZhangAdam F Lee
May 20, 2017·Biochemistry and Cell Biology = Biochimie Et Biologie Cellulaire·Anindita SenguptaVenkat Gopalan
Jan 24, 2020·Molecules : a Journal of Synthetic Chemistry and Natural Product Chemistry·Lucía PenínJuan Carlos Parajó
Sep 8, 2018·Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry·Siqi WangMohammad Nabi

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Biofuels (ASM)

Biofuels are produced through contemporary processes from biomass rather than geological processes involved in fossil fuel formation. Examples include biodiesel, green diesel, biogas, etc. Discover the latest research on biofuels in this feed.