WO2009112588A1 - Process for converting polysaccharides in an inorganic molten salt hydrate - Google Patents

Process for converting polysaccharides in an inorganic molten salt hydrate Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2009112588A1
WO2009112588A1 PCT/EP2009/053027 EP2009053027W WO2009112588A1 WO 2009112588 A1 WO2009112588 A1 WO 2009112588A1 EP 2009053027 W EP2009053027 W EP 2009053027W WO 2009112588 A1 WO2009112588 A1 WO 2009112588A1
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Prior art keywords
molten salt
inorganic molten
salt hydrate
inorganic
process according
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PCT/EP2009/053027
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French (fr)
Inventor
Paul O'connor
Rafael Menegasse De Almeida
Sjoerd Daamen
Jacob. A. Moulijn
Michiel Makkee
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Bioecon International Holding N.V.
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Application filed by Bioecon International Holding N.V. filed Critical Bioecon International Holding N.V.
Priority to JP2010550217A priority Critical patent/JP5757739B2/en
Priority to CN200980117227.1A priority patent/CN102027138B/en
Priority to CA2718145A priority patent/CA2718145A1/en
Priority to RU2010141854/13A priority patent/RU2503722C2/en
Priority to EP09720250.1A priority patent/EP2283164B1/en
Priority to BRPI0909325-7A priority patent/BRPI0909325A2/en
Priority to ES09720250.1T priority patent/ES2542981T3/en
Publication of WO2009112588A1 publication Critical patent/WO2009112588A1/en
Priority to US12/880,241 priority patent/US8445704B2/en
Priority to US13/867,253 priority patent/US20140039208A1/en

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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07DHETEROCYCLIC COMPOUNDS
    • C07D307/00Heterocyclic compounds containing five-membered rings having one oxygen atom as the only ring hetero atom
    • C07D307/02Heterocyclic compounds containing five-membered rings having one oxygen atom as the only ring hetero atom not condensed with other rings
    • C07D307/04Heterocyclic compounds containing five-membered rings having one oxygen atom as the only ring hetero atom not condensed with other rings having no double bonds between ring members or between ring members and non-ring members
    • C07D307/18Heterocyclic compounds containing five-membered rings having one oxygen atom as the only ring hetero atom not condensed with other rings having no double bonds between ring members or between ring members and non-ring members with hetero atoms or with carbon atoms having three bonds to hetero atoms with at the most one bond to halogen, e.g. ester or nitrile radicals, directly attached to ring carbon atoms
    • C07D307/20Oxygen atoms
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A23FOODS OR FOODSTUFFS; TREATMENT THEREOF, NOT COVERED BY OTHER CLASSES
    • A23LFOODS, FOODSTUFFS, OR NON-ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES, NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES A21D OR A23B-A23J; THEIR PREPARATION OR TREATMENT, e.g. COOKING, MODIFICATION OF NUTRITIVE QUALITIES, PHYSICAL TREATMENT; PRESERVATION OF FOODS OR FOODSTUFFS, IN GENERAL
    • A23L29/00Foods or foodstuffs containing additives; Preparation or treatment thereof
    • A23L29/30Foods or foodstuffs containing additives; Preparation or treatment thereof containing carbohydrate syrups; containing sugars; containing sugar alcohols, e.g. xylitol; containing starch hydrolysates, e.g. dextrin
    • A23L29/37Sugar alcohols
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07CACYCLIC OR CARBOCYCLIC COMPOUNDS
    • C07C29/00Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring
    • C07C29/132Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring by reduction of an oxygen containing functional group
    • C07C29/136Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring by reduction of an oxygen containing functional group of >C=O containing groups, e.g. —COOH
    • C07C29/143Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring by reduction of an oxygen containing functional group of >C=O containing groups, e.g. —COOH of ketones
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08BPOLYSACCHARIDES; DERIVATIVES THEREOF
    • C08B37/00Preparation of polysaccharides not provided for in groups C08B1/00 - C08B35/00; Derivatives thereof
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08HDERIVATIVES OF NATURAL MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS
    • C08H8/00Macromolecular compounds derived from lignocellulosic materials
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C13SUGAR INDUSTRY
    • C13KSACCHARIDES OBTAINED FROM NATURAL SOURCES OR BY HYDROLYSIS OF NATURALLY OCCURRING DISACCHARIDES, OLIGOSACCHARIDES OR POLYSACCHARIDES
    • C13K1/00Glucose; Glucose-containing syrups
    • C13K1/02Glucose; Glucose-containing syrups obtained by saccharification of cellulosic materials

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a process for converting polysaccharides, in particular lignocellulosic biomass material, in an inorganic molten salt hydrate to platform chemicals.
  • platform chemicals In view of environmental concerns, there is a need for platform chemicals from renewable resources.
  • platform chemicals is used to describe chemicals that are versatile starting materials for making specialty chemicals, and include sorbitol (or glucitol, alcohol sugar of glucose), xylitol/arabinitol (sugar alcohols from xylose and arabinose) and isosorbide (dianhydro-D-glucitol) and anhydrosugars [1].
  • Patents US 647,805 and US 607,091 describe such hydrolysis processes, the first being a concentrated acid hydrolysis and the second a diluted acid hydrolysis.
  • the diluted acid hydrolysis processes have a low yield, but do not need much further processing (acid removal) to separate and use the glucose formed.
  • concentrated acid processes have higher yields but present difficulties in sugar recovery / acid separation. Processes for acid neutralization and removal, concentration of syrup and precipitation of sugars are known to those skilled in the art.
  • US Patent 4,452,640 discloses a process to dissolve and quantitatively hydrolyze cellulose to glucose without formation of degradation products, using ZnCk solutions. Dissolution was effected with salt solutions, with 60 to 80 wt% ZnCI 2 being preferred, at sufficiently large contact time and temperatures of 70 to 18O 0 C, preferably 100 to 145 0 C. After dissolution, it was claimed that lowering the ZnCI 2 concentration (to 40 to 50 wt%) was further necessary prior to hydrolysis, to avoid glucose degradation, and subsequently HCI or a similar dilute acid was added to effect hydrolysis (down to pH ⁇ 2).
  • European Patent Application EP 0 091 221 A teaches the hydrolysis of cellulose or starch in solubilization media comprising water, an inorganic acid and hydrated halide of aluminum, optionally containing and additional metal halide, with yields close to 100 %. Longer hydrolysis times than the necessary lead to a lower yield of glucose due to degradation.
  • LiCI and CaCI 2 solutions were considered the most effective, ZnCI 2 , MgCI 2 and CaCI 2 being somewhat less effective, and FeCI 3 , SnCI 4 , NaCI, KCI, MnCI 2 , NiCI 2 , CuCI 2 , CoCI 2 and CdCI 2 being the least effective.
  • Typical conditions were 60-90 0 C, 15 to 25 wt% of cellulose substrate, in a dissolution medium containing 5-40 wt% of CaCI 2 and 25-40 wt% of HCI, pressure of 4-7 bar to maintain a liquid phase, and reaction times of 10 to 20 minutes, yielding more than 85 wt% of glucose.
  • Another advantage of the salts is the breaking of the azeotrope formed by HCI and water in reaction media with more than 15 wt% of CaCI 2 - making it easier to separate the HCI from the solution, which can be done with a simple evaporator.
  • Glucose the desired product of processes of cellulose hydrolysis, needs to be further separated from the concentrated salt media in such processes. Besides precipitation of part of the salt (CaCI 2 concentrated solutions, US 4,018,620), ion exchange and chromatographic methods (US 4,452,640 and [5]) or even electrodialysis [6] were considered.
  • a desired product of glucose is sorbitol, a hydrogenation product of glucose.
  • a further desired product of sorbitol is the dianhydro sorbitol, or isosorbide, which is a product of double dehydration of sorbitol.
  • Methods for producing isosorbide involve the dehydration of sorbitol (D- glucitol) in acidic solutions. Protonation due to the presence of acid occurs preferentially at the primary glucitol hydroxyl group.
  • the first internal dehydration step leads to 1-4 anhydro-D-glucitol.
  • the dehydration can also take place at the 3 and 6 positions, leading to the 3,6-anhydro isomer [9].
  • Further dehydration of both isomers leads to the 1 ,4-3,6 dianhydro-D-glucitol, or isosorbide .
  • Another possible first dehydration occurs at the 1 ,5 and 2,5 positions. In these positions no second intramolecular dehydration is observed, yielding the monoanhydride derivative.
  • Another complicating problem is the possibility of intramolecular elimination of water between two molecules, leading to higher molecular oligomeric or polymeric units.
  • Acidic catalysts mainly used in the dehydration of sorbitol are H 2 SO 4 , phosphoric acid, HCI and other acids such as p-toluene sulfonic, methanesulfonic acid.
  • Solid catalysts can be used such as acidic ion exchange resins, zeolites, and sulfated zircoriia.
  • dehydration is effected under vacuum (WO 00/14081), or with a flux of inert gas to effect water removal (for instance, using nitrogen, as taught by US Patents 6,407,266 and 6,689,892).
  • Temperature limits are 170 0 C in the presence of acid - above that significant char and tarring are to be expected, as US 6,831 ,181 teaches.
  • US Patent Application 20070173654 teaches the use of a hydrogenation catalyst during dehydration of a (preferably anhydrous) sugar alcohol, in the presence of an acidic catalyst.
  • the hydrogenation catalyst contains a metal selected from Pd, Pt, Ni, Co, Ru, Re, Rh, Ir and Fe, and a support, which is preferably carbon, or alternatively zirconia, titania, niobia, silica or tin oxide. It is also possible to employ bifunctional catalysts, combining acidic and hydrogenation functions.
  • the pressure is lower than 35 bar, preferably less than 20 bar, or even less than 10 bar, and preferred temperatures range from 110 0 C to about 17O 0 C.
  • the same patent teaches the possibility of using hydrogen flow in the countercurrent mode, as a way of effecting further water removal.
  • US Patent 6,013,812 teaches the use of hydrogenation and acidic catalysts in a hydrogen atmosphere to effect dehydration of polyols. Without claiming a particular catalyst, the authors used Pd/C and Ru/C and additional acids in the examples. In the presence of a catalyst, less than 1 wt% polymers, but significant amounts of low molar weight polyols were formed, products of metal catalyzed hydrogenolysis. Without acidic catalysts there is insufficient conversion of D-sorbitol. Raney Cu, Co/Cu/Mn, Raney Ni and Cr-Ni were also tested in the absence of acid, and in spite of a high conversion (hydrogenolysis) the formation of isosorbide was lower than 2 wt%.
  • Claimed salts are the ones with ions selected from the group consisting of magnesium, manganese, iron, cobalt, nickel, copper, actinium, thorium, protactinium, uranium, cerium, praseodymium, neodymium, promethium, samarium, europium, gadolinium, terbium, dysprosium, holmium, erbium, thulium, ytterbium and lutetium.
  • ions selected from the group consisting of magnesium, manganese, iron, cobalt, nickel, copper, actinium, thorium, protactinium, uranium, cerium, praseodymium, neodymium, promethium, samarium, europium, gadolinium, terbium, dysprosium, holmium, erbium, thulium, ytterbium and lutetium.
  • the dehydration of D-glucitol is effected in a 33 wt% aqueous solution containing a metal chloride at a mole ratio of 0.05 to D-glucitol, together with a nickel hydrogenation catalyst, without additional acid, yielding hydrogenolysis products (1 ,2-propylene glycol, ethylene glycol, glycerin and mannitol) and monoanhydro and dianhydro-D-glucitol.
  • DUCLOS et al. teach that heating D-glucitol in anhydrous pyridine chloride (ionic liquid) at 120 to 160 0 C for several hours (above 4h) lead to 1 ,4- anhydro-D-glucitol and, to a lesser extent, 1 ,4:3,6-dianhydro-D-glucitol. Surprisingly, the authors observed no 1 ,5 or 2,5 anhydro-D-glucitols.
  • An object of the present invention is to solve or mitigate the above problems
  • a process for the conversion of polysaccharides to anhydro polyols with minimized formation of byproducts comprising contacting the material with an inorganic molten salt hydrate, in a ratio molten salt hydrate to lignocellulosic material of 1 to 50 wt/wt, and subjecting the mixture to the sequential steps of: a) Hydrolysis: contacting the polysaccharide with a molten salt hydrate composition and an inorganic soluble acid, recovering the soluble hydrolysis sugar products; conditions being resulting acid molality of mixture from 0.1 to 2.0 molal, temperature from 50 to 15O 0 C and LHSV from 0.2 to 2 ⁇ ⁇ b) Hydrogenation: contacting the molten salt hydrate composition and sugars mixture obtained in step a) with a hydrogenation catalyst and hydrogen until full conversion of sugars to polyols; conditions being temperature from 60 0 C to 160 0 C and pressure of 1.0 to 20 MPa and LHSV from 0.05
  • molten salt hydrate compositions are, for example, molten salt hydrates comprising at least Zn, Ca or Li halides, or mixtures thereof, with a content of 40 to 80 wt% of salt in said composition.
  • an additional transition metal salt is added to the molten salt hydrate solution.
  • the molar ratio of additional salt to polyol, prior to step c) is from 0.01 to 5.
  • Preferred additional transition metal salts are the salts of copper or nickel, preferably NiCI 2 or CuCI 2 .
  • At least 50% of the inorganic soluble acid is removed after hydrolysis, prior to hydrogenation.
  • the process feedstock is a lignocellulosic material containing cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin, with hemicellulose being removed prior to step a) by any of the means known in the art (such as extraction with hot water), whereby the lignin is separated after the hydrolysis step a), the main product being 1 ,4:3,6 dianhydro-D-glucitol (isosorbide).
  • the process feedstock is a lignocellulosic material containing cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin, wherein the lignin is separated after the first a) hydrolysis step, and the products being the products of the dehydration of C5 and C6 polyols.
  • the process feedstock is cellulose
  • the main product is 1 ,4:3,6 dianhydro-D-glucitol.
  • FIGURE 1 is a scheme of a preferred embodiment of the process comprising the combined steps of dissolution and hydrolysis of cellulose, hydrogenation of glucose to sorbitol and dehydration to isosorbide in molten salt hydrate medium.
  • FIGURE 2 is a graph illustrating the effect of increasing the salt concentration in the ZnCI 2 molten salt hydrate media on the hydrolysis of cellulose, according to Example 2.
  • FIGURE 3 is a graph illustrating the effect of time on the hydrolysis of cellulose in a ZnCI 2 70 wt% molten salt hydrate media, according to Example 3.
  • FIGURE 4 is a graph illustrating the effect of hydrochloric acid on the hydrolysis of cellulose to glucose, according to Example 5, and on the hydrogenation of glucose to sorbitol, according to Example 6
  • FIGURE 5 is a graph that illustrates the effect of increasing the salt concentration in the ZnCI 2 molten salt hydrate media on the hydrogenation of glucose to sorbitol, according to Example 6.
  • FIGURE 6 is a graph that illustrates the effect of reaction time on the dehydration of sorbitol in the ZnCI 2 molten salt hydrate media in the presence of Copper chloride, according to Example 11.
  • FIGURE 7 is a graph that illustrates the effect of different concentrations of additional salt (CuCI 2 ) on the dehydration of sorbitol in the ZnCI 2 molten salt hydrate media, according to Example 12.
  • the present invention relates to a process for the conversion of polysaccharides, such as lignocellulosic material components, to sugars, then polyols and finally to certain dehydration products, the conversion steps being effected in an inorganic molten salt hydrate medium.
  • polysaccharides such as lignocellulosic material components
  • the invention relates to the conversion of cellulose and starch to sorbitol and subsequently to dehydration products.
  • cellulose Besides cellulose, hemicellulose is also a possible feedstock.
  • Cellulose and starch are polymers of glucose units, linked respectively by ⁇ glucosidic bonds and ⁇ bonds.
  • Hemicelluloses are polymers of C6 sugars, including glucose, mannose, galactose, and rhamnose, and C5 sugars such as xylose, and arabinose.
  • hemicelluloses are previously removed from the lignocellulosic material, as the separation of hemicellulose fraction from biomass is easily effected with hot water treatment or aqueous phase diluted acid hydrolysis. Hemicelluloses can be further fermented to produce ethanol.
  • suitable lignocellulosic materials include wood pulp, bagasse (in particular sugar cane bagasse), sawdust, cotton linter, stover, corn, straw, grasses, paper, forestry residues, sugar beet pulp, agriculture residues, algae, among others. In general any feedstock having at least 20 wt%, preferably 40 wt% of cellulose is suitable.
  • Lignocellulosic material is preferably pretreated to ensure a good contact with the molten salt hydrate media.
  • Pretreatment may include comminution effected by cutting, crushing, grinding and/or rasping.
  • crushers are used followed by grinders.
  • comminution of the lignocellulosic biomass material is effected in the first step, before the contact with the molten salt hydrate medium.
  • the comminution is effected during the contact with the molten salt hydrate medium.
  • the water content of the mixture of the inorganic molten salt hydrate media and the lignocellulosic biomass material results in a total water content in the mixture such that the cellulose material is soluble in the inorganic molten salt hydrate media.
  • the water content of the lignocellulosic material is lowered before contact with the salt hydrate media.
  • a preferred inorganic molten salt hydrate medium has at least 40 wt% of ZnCI 2 , more preferably 60 wt% Of ZnCI 2 , prior to the polysaccharide addition.
  • the preferred salt content in salt hydrate medium is within the range of 60 to 85 wt%, not considering the biomass content.
  • the salt content can be increased to compensate non-dried lignocellulosic material with high water content.
  • a salt content higher than 85 wt% in the ZnCI 2 media is not preferred, as the salt content may exceed the saturation concentration, which leads to precipitation Of ZnCI 2 from the salt media.
  • ZnCI 2 is the preferred inorganic molten salt hydrate
  • other inorganic molten salt hydrates may be used, alone or in combination with ZnCI 2 , such as other zinc halides (bromide, iodide), or halides of other metals known to dissolve or swell cellulose, such as CaCI 2 and LiCI.
  • At least one transition metal salt may be present in the inorganic molten salt hydrate to enhance dehydration in the sugar alcohol dehydration step.
  • Preferable metal salts are transition metal halides, preferably chlorides.
  • Useful transition metal salts are the chlorides of the groups of Cu 1 Ni, Co, Fe, Mn 1 Cr, V and Ti.
  • Preferred additional metal salts are CuCI 2 and NiC ⁇ .
  • the ratio of inorganic molten salt hydrate media to polysaccharide or biomass is preferably from 1 to 50 wt/wt, more preferably from 5 to 20 wt/wt.
  • the inorganic molten salt hydrate temperature prior to contact with the lignocellulosic material may be higher than the desired temperature in the hydrolysis step.
  • the mixture of lignocellulosic biomass and inorganic molten salt hydrate may be heated after mixing. Means of heat transfer known in the art can be utilized for obtaining the conditions required for the several modes of the present invention.
  • the desired temperature is the one optimal for hydrolysis.
  • addition of a mineral acid is desired, as shown in the following examples. Any of a number of mineral acids can be used, such as hydrochloric acid, hydrofluoric, sulfuric, phosphoric, and the like. Hydrochloric acid is the preferred acid, as it can be easily removed from the molten salt hydrate media by flash distillation, or stripping with nitrogen, or other suitable means known in the art.
  • the acid molality (mol acid per 1000 g of inorganic molten salt hydrate and acid mixture) is higher than 0.2 molal and lower than 2 molal, more preferably from 0.4 to 0.8 molal. Higher concentrations of acid than 2 molal may promote glucose degradation to undesirable compounds.
  • the hydrolysis temperature is such as to obtain a high hydrolysis rate, but a low degradation of glucose to undesired compounds.
  • preferred temperatures are higher than 70 0 C and lower than 15O 0 C, more preferably higher than 90 0 C and lower than 12O 0 C.
  • added gases preferably oxygen-free gases, may be added to the reaction system as heat transfer media.
  • the hydrolysis time, or residence time in the apparatus where the lignocellulosic material and molten salt hydrate and mineral acid are contacted, is such as to obtain full hydrolysis of polysaccharides, such as cellulose and hemicellulose, if present.
  • the residence time should be from 10 to 180 minutes, preferably from 30 to 60 minutes.
  • Equipments to effect the hydrolysis can be batch reactors, continuous stirred tank reactors (CSTR) or a sequence of 2 or more CSTRs, continuous tubular reactors, fluidized bed reactors (suspended biomass particles whose cellulose is being dissolved), screw reactors, rotating reactors with or without ball milling or any suitable means of contacting the phases.
  • CSTR continuous stirred tank reactor
  • continuous tubular reactors continuous tubular reactors
  • fluidized bed reactors uspended biomass particles whose cellulose is being dissolved
  • screw reactors rotating reactors with or without ball milling or any suitable means of contacting the phases.
  • the whole process sequence can also be done in a batch way, but the continuous process is preferred. Advantages of a continuous process over a batch process are well known to one skilled in the art.
  • the dissolution and hydrolysis convert the hydrolyzable polysaccharide material (cellulose and /or hemicellulose or starch) to C6 (and C5) monosaccharides (hexitols and pentitols sugars).
  • the lignin can be fully separated from the inorganic molten salt hydrate and sugar solution.
  • Suitable means to separate the insoluble lignin from the molten salt hydrate and sugar solution are filtration, centrifugation, decantation, use of hydrocyclones, settling, gas flotation, addition of an organic phase to which lignin would preferably interface, or a combination of these methods.
  • a preferred method is centrifugation or the use of hydrocyclones, with and additional filtration to prevent any solid from being sent to further catalytic hydrogenation. Lignin is preferably further washed to remove salt still present in the solid cake, prior to further use.
  • Lignin can be used as a heat source to the process, and as a way of producing hydrogen to be used in the subsequent process steps.
  • Hydrogen can be generated by any suitable process known in the art, such as lignin pyrolysis, steam reforming, or electrolysis of water from electricity produced by burning lignin.
  • the acid is removed prior to hydrogenation.
  • acids have an inhibiting effect on the hydrogenation of glucose to sorbitol.
  • separation of volatile acids such as hydrochloric acid is difficult, as it forms an azeotrope with water.
  • the azeotrope is broken in inorganic molten salt hydrate solutions, such as the ZnCI 2 concentrated solution preferred in the process of the present invention, as a result of which hydrochloric acid can be easily separated by flashing, distillation, countercurrent or concurrent stripping.
  • Hydrolysis is carried out at a temperature sufficient to provide a significant gas phase fugacity of hydrochloric acid.
  • Other non-volatile acids such as sulfuric or phosphoric acid can be removed by chemical treatment, preferably forming insoluble compounds.
  • the volatile hydrochloric acid is the preferred acid for use herein.
  • Hydrochloric acid can be removed in the same step as lignin removal, for example if flotation is used for lignin removal (with nitrogen or air, preferably nitrogen, acting as stripping gas and flotation agent).
  • Hydrochloric acid can also be removed in the same step as hydrogenation, for example by effecting a countercurrent hydrogenation, where hydrogen is fed to the bottom of the reactor and the mixture of hydrochloric acid, glucose and molten salt hydrate is fed previously to the catalyst bed region - in this case a previous mass contact region with suitable mass contact devices can also exist. Hydrochloric acid is removed together with hydrogen at the top of the reactor. The hydrogen/hydrochloric acid mixture may be bubbled through water for hydrochloric acid removal. Suitable countercurrent contacting devices upstream from the reaction zone can be bubble cap trays, Raschig rings, structured packings, or a combination of contact and reaction structures, such as internally finned monoliths (IFM).
  • IFN internally finned monoliths
  • Hydrogenation temperature is such as to obtain a high hydrogenation rate but low degradation of glucose to undesired compounds.
  • preferred temperatures are higher than 7O 0 C and lower than 150 0 C, more preferably higher than 90 0 C and lower than 120 0 C.
  • pressures higher than 10 bar preferably higher than 30 bar, more preferably higher than 50 bar, and temperatures lower than 120 0 C. Pressures higher than 200 bar are not economically advantageous.
  • the hydrogenation may be carried out at a LHSV of 0.05 to 5 h-1 and a molar excess of hydrogen with respect to the sugars (monosaccharides) being reduced of at least 2, preferably at least 3-fold.
  • Reaction is effected by contacting the molten salt hydrate and sugar solution with a catalyst.
  • a preferred means for contact is a fixed bed catalyst.
  • Alternative ways of contact are slurry reactors, expanded bed, moving beds - which can make it easier to replenish catalyst (and activity) continuously or intermittently.
  • the preferred reactor is a trickle bed (or flooded bed) reactor, as the high catalyst holdup and the employed conditions do not result in significant catalyst deactivation.
  • the inorganic molten salt hydrate can adsorb a significant part of the heat released during glucose hydrogenation, when the inorganic molten salt hydrate to biomass ratios of the invention are used. Additional procedures, such as product recycle, high gas / feed ratio can also be employed to minimize the heat increase due to glucose hydrogenation.
  • Suitable hydrogenation catalysts are the catalysts well known in sugar hydrogenation, such as Ru/C, Raney Ni or Raney Cu, Ni supported on carbon or alumina.
  • the active catalyst component is selected from the noble metals of the series Ru, Rh, Pd and Pt, or a transition metal of the series Cu, Cr, Co, Ni, Fe.
  • the preferred catalyst is Ru/C, as it is known to be less prone to leaching.
  • Suitable support materials include activated carbon, aluminum oxide, hydrotalcites, silicates, titanates, zirconates, and other metallic oxides such as Sn ⁇ 2 , Bi 2 O 5 , Sb 2 O 5 , MoO 3 , WO 3 , mixed oxides such as SiO 2 -AI 2 O 3 SiO 2 -TiO 2 , AI 2 O 3 -ZnO, SiO 2 -ZrO 2 , SiO 2 - SnO 2 , SiO 2 - MoO 3 , SiO 2 -WO 3 , metallic salts such as AIPO 4 , FePO 4 , Zn 3 (PO 4 ) 2 , Mg 3 (PO 4 ) 2 , Ti 3 (PO 4 ) 4 , Zr 3 (PO 4 .
  • Basic oxides can also be used, such as MgO, BeO, La 2 O 3 , CeO 2 , Pr 2 O 3 , Nd 2 O 3 , SmO 2 , ZrO 2 .
  • Homogeneous, non-supported catalysts can also be used, but they are usually not stable at the temperatures, preferably higher than 200 0 C, required for the dehydration step.
  • the desired reaction product is a product with at least 98 wt% of glucose or monosaccharide sugars present, available for conversion to sorbitol or the correspondent sugar alcohols. C6 sugars are hydrogenated to hexitols and C5 sugars are hydrogenated to pentitols,
  • Another possible embodiment of the invention is a one-pot combination of hydrolysis and hydrogenation, as it is possible to hydrogenate glucose to sorbitol even in the presence of the acid necessary for hydrolysis.
  • dehydration is performed to produce the desired isosorbide or correspondent (di) anhydro sugar alcohol.
  • One or two dehydrations are possible from the starting sugar alcohol, to first form an anhydro sugar alcohol and finally a dianhydro sugar alcohol.
  • the inorganic molten salt hydrate and sugar alcohols solution is sent to an additional reactor to effect the dehydration of sugar alcohols (sorbitol) to isosorbide or the correspondent anhydro sugar alcohols.
  • Temperatures from 160 to 320 0 C can be used, preferably from 220 to 280 0 C.
  • Pressures of 0.1 to 10 MPa are suitable, preferably from 2 to 6 MPa.
  • Preferably hydrogen atmosphere is employed, as it advantageously increases the yield of isosorbide.
  • Additional conditions are LHSV from 0.1 to 5 h-1.
  • the product of the hydrogenation step - inorganic molten salt hydrate and sugar alcohols solution and remaining hydrogen are sent to the dehydration reactor.
  • Conventional methods can be used to increase the temperature to the desired temperature range. Methods such as heat exchange with reaction product, furnaces, heating devices in the reactor, tube reactor, addition of a hot recycle flow and the like can be used, as long as the disclosed pressure, temperature, residence time (LHSV) are used. Full conversion of sorbitol is attained in the disclosed conditions.
  • a transition metal salt is used together with the inorganic molten salt hydrate and sorbitol or polyol solutions.
  • the molar ratio of additional salt cation to polyol is from 0.01 to 5, preferably 0.1 to 1.0, more preferably 0.2 to 0.5.
  • the combination of the inorganic molten salt hydrate media and the additional transition metal salt results in increased selectivity and conversion. It is also believed that the presence of hydrogen during the dehydration step further enhances the dehydration activity and selectivity. It is possible to form some amount of reduced metal during this step. Such metals can be separated by filtration and can be converted again to salt by contact with acid. In any event, the preferred additional salts, pressure and temperature are such that the formation of reduced metals is minimized.
  • the resulting isosorbide or equivalent anhydro sugar alcohols can be separated from the molten salt hydrate media by known separation techniques.
  • a preferred separation technique is extraction with hydrocarbons at temperatures higher than 100 0 C, where the solubility of isosorbide is significant.
  • the hydrocarbons are then cooled and the isosorbide or equivalent anhydro sugar alcohols are recovered by precipitation.
  • a preferred hydrocarbon to effect the separation is xylene.
  • Another preferred separation technique involves the vaporization of isosorbide, which has a vapor pressure significantly higher than sorbitol or anhydrosorbitol.
  • Stripping with water vapor or air at low pressure and high temperature can be used. In this case it is necessary to work at a temperature higher than the melting temperature of the (molten) salt, as water will also be removed. For ZnCI 2 the melting point is 275°C.
  • water can be re-added to the inorganic molten salt hydrate media. It is also possible to use an additional salt such as KCI in the hydrated inorganic molten salt to lower the melting point of anhydrous molten salt ZnCI 2 .
  • an additional salt such as KCI in the hydrated inorganic molten salt to lower the melting point of anhydrous molten salt ZnCI 2 .
  • One water molecule is consumed in the hydrolysis of each glucosidic moiety to form glucose when the glucosidic bond is broken, but two water molecules are generated in sorbitol dehydration, so there is a need to continuously remove water from the molten salt hydrate, in order to continuously maintain the desired molten salt hydrate composition.
  • This can be effected by heating and stripping the hydrated molten salt with inert gas or oxygen to remove the required amount of water.
  • This can be effected in combination with the removal of isosorbide, for example, when it is removed by vaporization of the compound, or during a regeneration step of the inorganic molten salt hydrate, if necessary.
  • the pentitols (originating from the hydrolysis of hemicellulose) dehydration yields just monoanhydrides, which are more difficult to separate, and thus it is preferred to effect first a hemicellulose removal, prior to contacting the cellulose feedstock with the inorganic molten salt hydrate media.
  • Line 1 represents the flux of lignocellulosic biomass material.
  • the lignocellulosic material (1) is mixed with the inorganic molten salt hydrate mixture (2) and sent together or separately to the reactor (10) to effect dissolution and, together with hydrochloric acid (3), effect the hydrolysis.
  • the mixture of inorganic molten salt hydrate, glucose and acid are discharged from the hydrolysis reactor, and sent to the separation (20) of lignin (4), used elsewhere in the process, and removal of hydrochloric acid (3) to be recycled to the hydrolysis step. A small make-up of hydrochloric acid may be necessary (17) to compensate for losses.
  • the mixture of inorganic molten salt hydrate and sorbitol (6) is sent to the dehydration reactor (40), where at proper higher temperature conditions sorbitol is converted to isosorbide.
  • the mixture of inorganic molten salt hydrate, isosorbide and hydrogen (7) is sent to a separator. Steps of heat transfer and heat recovery to the reactor feed and from the reactor product are not shown, but are well known to those skilled in the art.
  • Recovered hydrogen (8) is separated from the inorganic molten salt hydrate and isosorbide mixture (9) in separator (50).
  • Inorganic molten salt hydrate and isosorbide mixture (9) are sent to a separation step (60), where isosorbide and anhydro sugar alcohols (11) are separated from the hydrated molten salt mixture (12).
  • the procedure disclosed in (60) involves contacting the inorganic molten salt hydrate and isosorbide mixture (9) with xylene or a similar hydrocarbon in a suitable contact device (62) at a temperature higher than 120 0 C.
  • the apolar hydrocarbon/sorbitol phase (61) is separated and sent to a contact device at a low temperature (64).
  • the isosorbide crystals precipitate at temperatures lower than 6O 0 C.
  • the temperatures, pressures, contacting times and number of contact stages at (62) and (64), together with flow of (61) and (63) can be selected such that all the isosorbide is removed from the inorganic molten salt hydrate.
  • a regeneration of part of the inorganic molten salt hydrate might be useful, being effected at (80), from a fraction of the inorganic molten salt hydrate main flow (15), resulting in a regenerated inorganic molten salt hydrate (16), returning again to the main inorganic molten salt hydrate recycle (2).
  • a small make-up (19) of inorganic molten salt hydrate may be necessary, from salt lost and recovered from lignin burning, for example.
  • the inorganic molten salt hydrate in the desired composition (2) is then continuously added to the lignocellulosic material (1), resulting in a fully continuous process.
  • saccharose such as sugarcane or sugar beet.
  • saccharose would be first separated from the biomass and could be combined with biomass after hemicellulose removal and subjected to hydrolysis.
  • the saccharose will hydrolyze to glucose and fructose.
  • Glucose and fructose are further hydrogenated to a mixture of sorbitol and mannitol.
  • Double dehydration of sorbitol and mannitol yields respectively isosorbide and isomannide (dianhydromannitol or 1,4:3,6-dianhydro-D-mannitol). Isomannide can be further separated the same way as the isosorbide.
  • EXAMPLE 1 Effect of inorganic molten salt hydrate on cellulose dissolution - comparison with cellulose stability in other solvents.
  • [ooioi] Cellulose, long fibers, was mixed in different solvents to form a 5 wt% content mixture and immediately sent to an optical microscopy controlled heating cell. After the heating step, solutions were heated from 25°C up to 130 0 C at 5°C/minute and kept in this condition for 10 minutes.
  • An organic ionic liquid solvent known to dissolve cellulose made no change in the material in the same time frame, even after 10 minutes at 130 0 C.
  • the dissolution of cellulose in ZnCI 2 is fast and complete. The example shows that dissolution was complete in a small time frame.
  • FIG. 2 shows the HPLC results referenced to maximum glucose yield. It can be seen that at salt concentrations lower than 50 wt% no glucose was produced. Increasing the salt content increased the hydrolysis, and above 67 wt% the further increase was small.
  • EXAMPLE 6 Effect of acid content on glucose hydrogenation in the hydrated inorganic molten salt media of invention.
  • EXAMPLE 7 Effect of hydrated inorganic molten salt concentration on the hydrogenation step of sugar to polyol of invention.
  • EXAMPLE 8 Catalytic sorbitol hydrogenolysis at higher temperature in hydrated inorganic molten salt.
  • Sorbitol (0.5 g) with 0.25 g of Ru/C catalyst was mixed with 6.0 g of water or hydrated inorganic molten salt solutions of varying ZnCI 2 concentrations at 22O 0 C, 50 bar and 1h reaction time. With water, significant conversion to hydrogenolysis (isomerization and the production of lower molar weight polyols) products is evidenced. As the salt content is increased, hydrogenolysis is severely inhibited, and at 70 wt% ZnCI 2 inorganic molten salt medium, small amounts of just 2 products remain: anhydroglucitols, products of dehydration of sorbitol, having one (sorbitans) or two (isosorbide) fewer water molecules. The results show that the hydrated inorganic molten salt media inhibit the hydrogenolysis products and favor the formation of dehydration products, under hydrogenation conditions.
  • EXAMPLE 9 Process of dehydration of sorbitol in hydrated inorganic molten salt media and effect of additional salts and comparison with dehydration in aqueous media in hydrogen and nitrogen atmosphere.
  • Sorbitol 0.5 g was mixed with 6.0 g of ZnCI 2 70 wt% or water. CuCI 2 was added in some tests as an additional salt, in a quantity of 1 mol per 2 mol of sorbitol.
  • Temperature of reaction was 250 0 C for 1 h reaction time, and pressure 50 bar of H 2 or N 2 .
  • HPLC results showed just 3 peaks, assigned to sorbitol, anhydrosorbitols (sorbitans) and isosorbide (1 ,4:3,6-dianhydrosorbitol).
  • the hydrated inorganic molten salt is able to effect the dehydration of sorbitol - and surprisingly to a higher extent in hydrogen atmosphere instead of nitrogen atmosphere. It can be seen that the addition of additional CuCI 2 salt increased the dehydration activity. The best results were obtained with the additional salt dissolved in ZnCI 2 hydrated inorganic molten salt in hydrogen atmosphere of the present invention.
  • EXAMPLE 10 Invention process of sorbitol dehydration in different hydrated inorganic molten salt medium and several additional salts.
  • Sorbitol (0.5 g) was mixed with 6.0 g of different salts (ZnCI 2 70 wt% or CaCI 2 42.7 wt% or LiCI 45.4 wt%) and additional salts in a cation / sorbitol ratio of 0.1.
  • Reaction pressure was 50 bar of hydrogen atmosphere and temperature of 23O 0 C for 1 h time.
  • CuCI 2 and NiCI 2 are the most active salts. Conversion of sorbitol was significant just in ZnCI 2 hydrated inorganic molten salt media. CaCI 2 and LiCI hydrated inorganic molten salt media were not effective for sorbitol conversion, even though these salts were reported in the prior art as superior to ZnCI 2 in the hydrated inorganic molten salt hydrolysis of cellulose. A salt known to be more easily reduced, like RuCI 3 , to RuO, did not show a high sorbitol conversion, so formation of in situ HCI is not the main mechanism of sorbitol conversion by dehydration of the present invention.
  • the Figure shows the following product profiles, with sorbitol being dehydrated to the first dehydration product (sorbitan), followed by further dehydration of sorbitans to isosorbide.
  • the main products of first dehydration are 1 ,4 and 3,6 anhydrosorbitol, and not 2,5 or 1 ,5 anhydro products - which further dehydration does not proceed according to the art.
  • EXAMPLE 12 Effect of additional salt content on dehydration in inorganic molten salt hydrate.
  • Inorganic molten salt hydrate of ZnCb 70 wt% (6.0 g) was mixed with 0.5 g of sorbitol and different contents of C11CI 2 (from zero to 1 mol of Cu per mol of sorbitol). Reaction time was 1h, temperature of 235°C and pressure of 50 bar. The results are shown in FIG. 7.

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Abstract

A process is disclosed for converting polysaccharides to platform chemicals. The process comprises dissolving the polysaccharides in a inorganic molten salt hydrate, converting the polysaccharides to monosaccharides, and converting the monosaccharides to platform chemicals that are easily separable from the inorganic molten salt hydrate. Preferably the polysaccharides are provided in the form of a biomass, more preferably a ligno-cellulosic biomass.

Description

PROCESS FOR CONVERTING POLYSACCHARIDES IN AN INORGANIC
MOLTEN SALT HYDRATE
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
[oooi] The present invention relates to a process for converting polysaccharides, in particular lignocellulosic biomass material, in an inorganic molten salt hydrate to platform chemicals.
2. Description of the Related Art
[0002] In view of environmental concerns, there is a need for platform chemicals from renewable resources. The term platform chemicals is used to describe chemicals that are versatile starting materials for making specialty chemicals, and include sorbitol (or glucitol, alcohol sugar of glucose), xylitol/arabinitol (sugar alcohols from xylose and arabinose) and isosorbide (dianhydro-D-glucitol) and anhydrosugars [1].
[0003] It is considered a technical barrier to obtain (di) anhydro sugars production by selective dehydration of polyols, without side reactions. To produce such polyol dehydration products it is necessary to produce sugars, and subsequently hydrogenate such sugars to polyols. Several ways for producing sugars from lignocellulosic material are known in the art, and several ways for producing polyols from sugar are known in the art. A known method for producing sugars from cellulosic material is by acid hydrolysis.
[0004] Patents US 647,805 and US 607,091 describe such hydrolysis processes, the first being a concentrated acid hydrolysis and the second a diluted acid hydrolysis. On the one hand, the diluted acid hydrolysis processes have a low yield, but do not need much further processing (acid removal) to separate and use the glucose formed. On the other hand, concentrated acid processes have higher yields but present difficulties in sugar recovery / acid separation. Processes for acid neutralization and removal, concentration of syrup and precipitation of sugars are known to those skilled in the art.
[0005] The fact that certain compounds are capable of dissolving cellulose are used in the art to derivatize cellulose to other chemicals. Heinze and coworkers [2], [3] provide an overview of the technology of dissolution of cellulose for derivatization.
[0006] Polysaccharides, such as cellulose, lignin and starch are easily dissolved in certain concentrated metal halides, like zinc halides ([4] and US 257,607. Similarly, processes were developed to provide a faster, higher yield for cellulose hydrolysis to glucose, based on the concept of dissolution of the cellulose and further hydrolysis of cellulose to glucose in homogeneous media.
[0007] Calcium chloride concentrated solutions (5 to 55 wt%) with small amount of HCI (from 0.01 % to 2 wt%) were used to hydrolyze cellulose to monosaccharides, US Patent 4,018,620. The calcium chloride was partially separated from the remaining solution by crystallization, but further removal of ions Ca2+ and Cl" were necessary. The swelling effect of the salt is believed to enhance the hydrolysis.
[0008] US Patent 4,452,640 discloses a process to dissolve and quantitatively hydrolyze cellulose to glucose without formation of degradation products, using ZnCk solutions. Dissolution was effected with salt solutions, with 60 to 80 wt% ZnCI2 being preferred, at sufficiently large contact time and temperatures of 70 to 18O0C, preferably 100 to 1450C. After dissolution, it was claimed that lowering the ZnCI2 concentration (to 40 to 50 wt%) was further necessary prior to hydrolysis, to avoid glucose degradation, and subsequently HCI or a similar dilute acid was added to effect hydrolysis (down to pH < 2).
[0009] A later publication of the same group showed results without the salt concentration lowering step [5]: experiments with dissolution media comprising 67 wt% of ZnCI2 were performed at temperatures of 50 to 1000C and 2 hours time. Additional acid showed to be necessary to effect hydrolysis, 0.5 mol/L of solution being the optimum, with low conversion at lower concentrations and low yield at higher concentrations. [0010] A reasonable temperature was 700C, hydrolysis being incomplete at lower temperatures, and further conversion of glucose to other products at 1000C. Experimental ratios of ZnCI2 to cellulose were from 1.5 to 18. The higher the ZnCI2 /cellulose ratio the higher was the yield of glucose. Contrary to previous teaching (US 4,452,640), the presence Of ZnCI2 lowered the degradation of glucose, in comparison to an aqueous solution of the same HCI content. Concentrated salt solutions were preferred, as solutions with increased water content were unable to dissolve cellulose, thus affecting the hydrolysis rate.
[ooii] European Patent Application EP 0 091 221 A teaches the hydrolysis of cellulose or starch in solubilization media comprising water, an inorganic acid and hydrated halide of aluminum, optionally containing and additional metal halide, with yields close to 100 %. Longer hydrolysis times than the necessary lead to a lower yield of glucose due to degradation.
[0012] Ragg and Fields from Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI) teach a process for hydrolysis of lignocellulosic waste using metal halides and hydrochloric acid as catalysts [6].
[0013] Several salts where tested to effect hydrolysis, LiCI and CaCI2 solutions were considered the most effective, ZnCI2, MgCI2 and CaCI2 being somewhat less effective, and FeCI3, SnCI4, NaCI, KCI, MnCI2, NiCI2, CuCI2, CoCI2 and CdCI2 being the least effective. Typical conditions were 60-900C, 15 to 25 wt% of cellulose substrate, in a dissolution medium containing 5-40 wt% of CaCI2 and 25-40 wt% of HCI, pressure of 4-7 bar to maintain a liquid phase, and reaction times of 10 to 20 minutes, yielding more than 85 wt% of glucose.
[0014] Another advantage of the salts is the breaking of the azeotrope formed by HCI and water in reaction media with more than 15 wt% of CaCI2 - making it easier to separate the HCI from the solution, which can be done with a simple evaporator.
[0015] Glucose, the desired product of processes of cellulose hydrolysis, needs to be further separated from the concentrated salt media in such processes. Besides precipitation of part of the salt (CaCI2 concentrated solutions, US 4,018,620), ion exchange and chromatographic methods (US 4,452,640 and [5]) or even electrodialysis [6] were considered.
[0016] In all these separation procedures, the salt - the main compound of the solution- is to be removed, which increases the separation cost. Other usual separation procedures such as vaporization cannot be used as glucose degrades at higher temperatures. Extraction is not an option, as both the salt and glucose are soluble in water.
[0017] A desired product of glucose is sorbitol, a hydrogenation product of glucose. A further desired product of sorbitol is the dianhydro sorbitol, or isosorbide, which is a product of double dehydration of sorbitol.
[0018] Reviews of Fleche [7] and Stoss [8] present the uses, properties and chemistry of isosorbide, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.
[0019] Methods for producing isosorbide involve the dehydration of sorbitol (D- glucitol) in acidic solutions. Protonation due to the presence of acid occurs preferentially at the primary glucitol hydroxyl group. The first internal dehydration step leads to 1-4 anhydro-D-glucitol. The dehydration can also take place at the 3 and 6 positions, leading to the 3,6-anhydro isomer [9]. Further dehydration of both isomers leads to the 1 ,4-3,6 dianhydro-D-glucitol, or isosorbide . Another possible first dehydration occurs at the 1 ,5 and 2,5 positions. In these positions no second intramolecular dehydration is observed, yielding the monoanhydride derivative. Another complicating problem is the possibility of intramolecular elimination of water between two molecules, leading to higher molecular oligomeric or polymeric units.
[0020] The teachings of most prior art patents deal with attempts of increasing the selectivity by preventing the formation of polymeric units and working in conditions where 1 ,5 and 2,5 dehydration products are less favored.
[002]] Acidic catalysts mainly used in the dehydration of sorbitol are H2SO4, phosphoric acid, HCI and other acids such as p-toluene sulfonic, methanesulfonic acid. Solid catalysts can be used such as acidic ion exchange resins, zeolites, and sulfated zircoriia. [0022] According to the state of the art of dehydration using acidic catalysts, dehydration conditions should be as anhydrous as possible. To accomplish this, dehydration is effected under vacuum (WO 00/14081), or with a flux of inert gas to effect water removal (for instance, using nitrogen, as taught by US Patents 6,407,266 and 6,689,892). Temperature limits are 1700C in the presence of acid - above that significant char and tarring are to be expected, as US 6,831 ,181 teaches.
[0023] It is possible to separate the isosorbide from the reaction mass using vacuum, as it has a vapor pressure of 2 mm Hg at 140°C-145°C and the vapor pressure of anhydroglucitol is just 0.04 mmHg at the same temperature. Process schemes involving separation and reaction using acidic catalysts are known in literature. US Patent 6,831 ,181 teaches such a process.
[0024] Besides the 1 ,5 and 2,5 monoanhydrohexitols, the formation of oligomeric and polymeric anhydrides is a problem - so, process schemes have been suggested whereby water is added after the reaction, to precipitate the polymers (but not dimers or monoanhydrides). In such a continuous process, a purge is necessary for removal of the non-reactive 1 ,5 and 2,5 monanhydrohexitols. Such procedures of recycle, precipitation and purge are taught by US Patents 6,831 ,181 and 6,864,378. Also, to further inhibit the formation of 2,5 monoanhydrohexitols, it is taught by US Patent Application 20070173651 to perform the reaction in acidic media in 2 temperature steps, a first step lower than 1200C, and a second step higher than 1200C. Furthermore, according to US Application 20070173652, it would be interesting to remove water from the polyol before the first dehydration, and after the first dehydration, and preferably during the first dehydration.
[0025] When using solid catalysts, such as acidic resins, to effect the dehydration, deactivation of the catalyst is a further problem. US 20070173653 teaches periodic catalyst washing with certain protic or aprotic solvents to ensure a longer catalyst life.
[0026] The literature also teaches procedures to prevent the formation of degradation oligomers and polymers involving hydrogenation under dehydration conditions, as in US Patent 6,013.812 and US Patent Application 20070173654. [0027] US Patent Application 20070173654 teaches the use of a hydrogenation catalyst during dehydration of a (preferably anhydrous) sugar alcohol, in the presence of an acidic catalyst. The hydrogenation catalyst contains a metal selected from Pd, Pt, Ni, Co, Ru, Re, Rh, Ir and Fe, and a support, which is preferably carbon, or alternatively zirconia, titania, niobia, silica or tin oxide. It is also possible to employ bifunctional catalysts, combining acidic and hydrogenation functions. The pressure is lower than 35 bar, preferably less than 20 bar, or even less than 10 bar, and preferred temperatures range from 1100C to about 17O0C. The same patent teaches the possibility of using hydrogen flow in the countercurrent mode, as a way of effecting further water removal.
[0028] US Patent 6,013,812 teaches the use of hydrogenation and acidic catalysts in a hydrogen atmosphere to effect dehydration of polyols. Without claiming a particular catalyst, the authors used Pd/C and Ru/C and additional acids in the examples. In the presence of a catalyst, less than 1 wt% polymers, but significant amounts of low molar weight polyols were formed, products of metal catalyzed hydrogenolysis. Without acidic catalysts there is insufficient conversion of D-sorbitol. Raney Cu, Co/Cu/Mn, Raney Ni and Cr-Ni were also tested in the absence of acid, and in spite of a high conversion (hydrogenolysis) the formation of isosorbide was lower than 2 wt%.
[0029] MONTASSIER et al [10], [11], [12] teach the use of Cu/C or bimetallic copper catalysts to effect the dehydration of D-glucitol and other polyols under hydrogenation conditions, without added acids. Apparently, ionic copper compounds formed during the reaction in the catalyst surface are significantly electrophilic and capable of interacting strongly with the polyol hydroxyl groups, weakening the C-O bond, and thus catalyzing the formation of the cyclic internal dehydration products. Bimetallic copper-based catalysts, such as Cu/Ru, are also active, as the presence of Ru enhances the polarity of Cu. Unfortunately, the stability of such catalysts is extremely low (hours), due to the leaching of copper compounds. Hydrogenolysis byproducts are also formed. Stability of the catalyst could be enhanced to some extent by addition of NaCI. [0030] US Patent 4,313,884 teaches that metal ions with a charge-to-ionic-radius ratio from about 2.0 to about 3.2 catalyze the dehydration of hexitols, at a temperature from about 100 to about 3000C, preferably from 150 to 25O0C. A hexose, such as D-glucose, may be converted directly to anhydrohexitols by the hydrogenation in the presence of a hydrogenation catalyst to which the appropriate metal salt has been added. The metal ion-to-polyol ratio is from about 0.01 to about 0.1. Claimed salts are the ones with ions selected from the group consisting of magnesium, manganese, iron, cobalt, nickel, copper, actinium, thorium, protactinium, uranium, cerium, praseodymium, neodymium, promethium, samarium, europium, gadolinium, terbium, dysprosium, holmium, erbium, thulium, ytterbium and lutetium. In the examples the dehydration of D-glucitol is effected in a 33 wt% aqueous solution containing a metal chloride at a mole ratio of 0.05 to D-glucitol, together with a nickel hydrogenation catalyst, without additional acid, yielding hydrogenolysis products (1 ,2-propylene glycol, ethylene glycol, glycerin and mannitol) and monoanhydro and dianhydro-D-glucitol.
[0031] DUCLOS et al. [13] teach that heating D-glucitol in anhydrous pyridine chloride (ionic liquid) at 120 to 1600C for several hours (above 4h) lead to 1 ,4- anhydro-D-glucitol and, to a lesser extent, 1 ,4:3,6-dianhydro-D-glucitol. Surprisingly, the authors observed no 1 ,5 or 2,5 anhydro-D-glucitols.
[0032] Prior art publications mostly consider the use of anhydrous D-glucitol as feedstock, or prefer the removal of water present prior to dehydration and also during dehydration - so there are several previous steps to prepare feedstock to dehydration and additional production of glucitol from glucose, and production of glucose from cellulose or starch or other suitable means.
[0033] In none of the publications product was formed without by-products, such as polymerization products, 2,5-anhydro-D-glucitols, hydrogenolysis products - or with full conversion to the desired isosorbide product.
[0034] So there is a need for a process that is able to produce isosorbide with enhanced yield and with reduced formation of by-products. [0035] Also, there is a need for processes to convert cellulose to glucose and further derivatives, preferentially a platform chemical, with enhanced conversion, such as those obtained in cellulose hydrolysis in homogeneous media.
[0036] Unfortunately, the separation of glucose from the dissolution agents is difficult in the hydrolysis in homogeneous media.
An object of the present invention is to solve or mitigate the above problems
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0037] Disclosed is a process for the conversion of polysaccharides to anhydro polyols with minimized formation of byproducts, comprising contacting the material with an inorganic molten salt hydrate, in a ratio molten salt hydrate to lignocellulosic material of 1 to 50 wt/wt, and subjecting the mixture to the sequential steps of: a) Hydrolysis: contacting the polysaccharide with a molten salt hydrate composition and an inorganic soluble acid, recovering the soluble hydrolysis sugar products; conditions being resulting acid molality of mixture from 0.1 to 2.0 molal, temperature from 50 to 15O0C and LHSV from 0.2 to 2\\ \ b) Hydrogenation: contacting the molten salt hydrate composition and sugars mixture obtained in step a) with a hydrogenation catalyst and hydrogen until full conversion of sugars to polyols; conditions being temperature from 600C to 1600C and pressure of 1.0 to 20 MPa and LHSV from 0.05 to 10 h"1. c) Dehydration: increasing the temperature of the inorganic molten salt hydrate composition and polyols mixture to effect full dehydration of polyols to dehydration products; conditions being pressure of 0.1 to 10 MPa, temperature from 160 to 3200C and LHSV from 0.1 to 10 IT1. d) Recovery: separating anhydro polyols dehydration products and excess water from the hydrated inorganic molten salt composition, the hydrated inorganic molten salt after recovery step d) being directed to step a). Said molten salt hydrate compositions are, for example, molten salt hydrates comprising at least Zn, Ca or Li halides, or mixtures thereof, with a content of 40 to 80 wt% of salt in said composition.
[0038] In a preferred embodiment an additional transition metal salt is added to the molten salt hydrate solution. The molar ratio of additional salt to polyol, prior to step c) is from 0.01 to 5. Preferred additional transition metal salts are the salts of copper or nickel, preferably NiCI2 or CuCI2.
[0039] Preferably at least 50% of the inorganic soluble acid is removed after hydrolysis, prior to hydrogenation.
[0040] In a preferred embodiment the process feedstock is a lignocellulosic material containing cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin, with hemicellulose being removed prior to step a) by any of the means known in the art (such as extraction with hot water), whereby the lignin is separated after the hydrolysis step a), the main product being 1 ,4:3,6 dianhydro-D-glucitol (isosorbide).
[0041] In another preferred embodiment the process feedstock is a lignocellulosic material containing cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin, wherein the lignin is separated after the first a) hydrolysis step, and the products being the products of the dehydration of C5 and C6 polyols.
[0042] In another preferred embodiment the process feedstock is cellulose, and the main product is 1 ,4:3,6 dianhydro-D-glucitol.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0043] FIGURE 1 is a scheme of a preferred embodiment of the process comprising the combined steps of dissolution and hydrolysis of cellulose, hydrogenation of glucose to sorbitol and dehydration to isosorbide in molten salt hydrate medium.
[0044] FIGURE 2 is a graph illustrating the effect of increasing the salt concentration in the ZnCI2 molten salt hydrate media on the hydrolysis of cellulose, according to Example 2. [0045] FIGURE 3 is a graph illustrating the effect of time on the hydrolysis of cellulose in a ZnCI2 70 wt% molten salt hydrate media, according to Example 3.
[0046] FIGURE 4 is a graph illustrating the effect of hydrochloric acid on the hydrolysis of cellulose to glucose, according to Example 5, and on the hydrogenation of glucose to sorbitol, according to Example 6
[0047] FIGURE 5 is a graph that illustrates the effect of increasing the salt concentration in the ZnCI2 molten salt hydrate media on the hydrogenation of glucose to sorbitol, according to Example 6.
[0048] FIGURE 6 is a graph that illustrates the effect of reaction time on the dehydration of sorbitol in the ZnCI2 molten salt hydrate media in the presence of Copper chloride, according to Example 11.
[0049] FIGURE 7 is a graph that illustrates the effect of different concentrations of additional salt (CuCI2) on the dehydration of sorbitol in the ZnCI2 molten salt hydrate media, according to Example 12.
DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENTS
[0050] The present invention relates to a process for the conversion of polysaccharides, such as lignocellulosic material components, to sugars, then polyols and finally to certain dehydration products, the conversion steps being effected in an inorganic molten salt hydrate medium.
[0051] More specifically, the invention relates to the conversion of cellulose and starch to sorbitol and subsequently to dehydration products. Besides cellulose, hemicellulose is also a possible feedstock. Cellulose and starch are polymers of glucose units, linked respectively by β glucosidic bonds and α bonds. Hemicelluloses are polymers of C6 sugars, including glucose, mannose, galactose, and rhamnose, and C5 sugars such as xylose, and arabinose.
[0052] Preferably, hemicelluloses are previously removed from the lignocellulosic material, as the separation of hemicellulose fraction from biomass is easily effected with hot water treatment or aqueous phase diluted acid hydrolysis. Hemicelluloses can be further fermented to produce ethanol. [0053] Examples of suitable lignocellulosic materials include wood pulp, bagasse (in particular sugar cane bagasse), sawdust, cotton linter, stover, corn, straw, grasses, paper, forestry residues, sugar beet pulp, agriculture residues, algae, among others. In general any feedstock having at least 20 wt%, preferably 40 wt% of cellulose is suitable.
[0054] Lignocellulosic material is preferably pretreated to ensure a good contact with the molten salt hydrate media. Pretreatment may include comminution effected by cutting, crushing, grinding and/or rasping. Preferably, crushers are used followed by grinders. In one of the preferred embodiments, comminution of the lignocellulosic biomass material is effected in the first step, before the contact with the molten salt hydrate medium. In another preferred embodiment, the comminution is effected during the contact with the molten salt hydrate medium.
[0055] According to the invention, the water content of the mixture of the inorganic molten salt hydrate media and the lignocellulosic biomass material results in a total water content in the mixture such that the cellulose material is soluble in the inorganic molten salt hydrate media. Thus, it may be necessary to feed an inorganic molten salt hydrate medium with less water in case the lignocellulosic material has a significant water content. In another preferred embodiment, the water content of the lignocellulosic material is lowered before contact with the salt hydrate media.
[0056] A preferred inorganic molten salt hydrate medium has at least 40 wt% of ZnCI2, more preferably 60 wt% Of ZnCI2, prior to the polysaccharide addition. The preferred salt content in salt hydrate medium is within the range of 60 to 85 wt%, not considering the biomass content. The salt content can be increased to compensate non-dried lignocellulosic material with high water content. A salt content higher than 85 wt% in the ZnCI2 media is not preferred, as the salt content may exceed the saturation concentration, which leads to precipitation Of ZnCI2 from the salt media.
[0057] Although 70 wt% ZnCI2 is the preferred inorganic molten salt hydrate, other inorganic molten salt hydrates may be used, alone or in combination with ZnCI2, such as other zinc halides (bromide, iodide), or halides of other metals known to dissolve or swell cellulose, such as CaCI2 and LiCI. [0058] At least one transition metal salt may be present in the inorganic molten salt hydrate to enhance dehydration in the sugar alcohol dehydration step. Preferable metal salts are transition metal halides, preferably chlorides. Useful transition metal salts are the chlorides of the groups of Cu1 Ni, Co, Fe, Mn1 Cr, V and Ti. Preferred additional metal salts are CuCI2 and NiC^.
[0059] The ratio of inorganic molten salt hydrate media to polysaccharide or biomass is preferably from 1 to 50 wt/wt, more preferably from 5 to 20 wt/wt.
[0060] The inorganic molten salt hydrate temperature prior to contact with the lignocellulosic material may be higher than the desired temperature in the hydrolysis step. Or the mixture of lignocellulosic biomass and inorganic molten salt hydrate may be heated after mixing. Means of heat transfer known in the art can be utilized for obtaining the conditions required for the several modes of the present invention. The desired temperature is the one optimal for hydrolysis. In the hydrolysis step, addition of a mineral acid is desired, as shown in the following examples. Any of a number of mineral acids can be used, such as hydrochloric acid, hydrofluoric, sulfuric, phosphoric, and the like. Hydrochloric acid is the preferred acid, as it can be easily removed from the molten salt hydrate media by flash distillation, or stripping with nitrogen, or other suitable means known in the art.
[0061] Preferably the acid molality (mol acid per 1000 g of inorganic molten salt hydrate and acid mixture) is higher than 0.2 molal and lower than 2 molal, more preferably from 0.4 to 0.8 molal. Higher concentrations of acid than 2 molal may promote glucose degradation to undesirable compounds.
[0062] The hydrolysis temperature is such as to obtain a high hydrolysis rate, but a low degradation of glucose to undesired compounds. In practice, preferred temperatures are higher than 700C and lower than 15O0C, more preferably higher than 900C and lower than 12O0C. To ensure the desired temperature in the hydrolysis step, added gases, preferably oxygen-free gases, may be added to the reaction system as heat transfer media. The hydrolysis time, or residence time in the apparatus where the lignocellulosic material and molten salt hydrate and mineral acid are contacted, is such as to obtain full hydrolysis of polysaccharides, such as cellulose and hemicellulose, if present. In practice, the residence time should be from 10 to 180 minutes, preferably from 30 to 60 minutes.
[0063] Equipments to effect the hydrolysis can be batch reactors, continuous stirred tank reactors (CSTR) or a sequence of 2 or more CSTRs, continuous tubular reactors, fluidized bed reactors (suspended biomass particles whose cellulose is being dissolved), screw reactors, rotating reactors with or without ball milling or any suitable means of contacting the phases. In the case of batch reactors, several parallel reactors can be used, so the subsequent homogeneous phase process steps can be kept continuous. The whole process sequence can also be done in a batch way, but the continuous process is preferred. Advantages of a continuous process over a batch process are well known to one skilled in the art.
[0064] The dissolution and hydrolysis convert the hydrolyzable polysaccharide material (cellulose and /or hemicellulose or starch) to C6 (and C5) monosaccharides (hexitols and pentitols sugars). After the hydrolysis step the lignin can be fully separated from the inorganic molten salt hydrate and sugar solution. Suitable means to separate the insoluble lignin from the molten salt hydrate and sugar solution are filtration, centrifugation, decantation, use of hydrocyclones, settling, gas flotation, addition of an organic phase to which lignin would preferably interface, or a combination of these methods. A preferred method is centrifugation or the use of hydrocyclones, with and additional filtration to prevent any solid from being sent to further catalytic hydrogenation. Lignin is preferably further washed to remove salt still present in the solid cake, prior to further use.
[0065] Lignin can be used as a heat source to the process, and as a way of producing hydrogen to be used in the subsequent process steps. Hydrogen can be generated by any suitable process known in the art, such as lignin pyrolysis, steam reforming, or electrolysis of water from electricity produced by burning lignin.
[0066] In a preferred embodiment of the invention process the acid is removed prior to hydrogenation. As illustrated in the examples, acids have an inhibiting effect on the hydrogenation of glucose to sorbitol. In prior art hydrolysis processes, separation of volatile acids such as hydrochloric acid is difficult, as it forms an azeotrope with water. Fortunately, the azeotrope is broken in inorganic molten salt hydrate solutions, such as the ZnCI2 concentrated solution preferred in the process of the present invention, as a result of which hydrochloric acid can be easily separated by flashing, distillation, countercurrent or concurrent stripping.
[0067] Hydrolysis is carried out at a temperature sufficient to provide a significant gas phase fugacity of hydrochloric acid. Other non-volatile acids such as sulfuric or phosphoric acid can be removed by chemical treatment, preferably forming insoluble compounds.
[0068] Due to the additional chemical consumption cost of non-volatile acids, the volatile hydrochloric acid is the preferred acid for use herein. Hydrochloric acid can be removed in the same step as lignin removal, for example if flotation is used for lignin removal (with nitrogen or air, preferably nitrogen, acting as stripping gas and flotation agent).
[0069] Hydrochloric acid can also be removed in the same step as hydrogenation, for example by effecting a countercurrent hydrogenation, where hydrogen is fed to the bottom of the reactor and the mixture of hydrochloric acid, glucose and molten salt hydrate is fed previously to the catalyst bed region - in this case a previous mass contact region with suitable mass contact devices can also exist. Hydrochloric acid is removed together with hydrogen at the top of the reactor. The hydrogen/hydrochloric acid mixture may be bubbled through water for hydrochloric acid removal. Suitable countercurrent contacting devices upstream from the reaction zone can be bubble cap trays, Raschig rings, structured packings, or a combination of contact and reaction structures, such as internally finned monoliths (IFM).
[0070] Hydrogenation temperature is such as to obtain a high hydrogenation rate but low degradation of glucose to undesired compounds. In practice, preferred temperatures are higher than 7O0C and lower than 1500C, more preferably higher than 900C and lower than 1200C. In practice it is preferred to work with pressures higher than 10 bar, preferably higher than 30 bar, more preferably higher than 50 bar, and temperatures lower than 1200C. Pressures higher than 200 bar are not economically advantageous. [0071] The hydrogenation may be carried out at a LHSV of 0.05 to 5 h-1 and a molar excess of hydrogen with respect to the sugars (monosaccharides) being reduced of at least 2, preferably at least 3-fold.
[0072] Reaction is effected by contacting the molten salt hydrate and sugar solution with a catalyst. A preferred means for contact is a fixed bed catalyst. Alternative ways of contact are slurry reactors, expanded bed, moving beds - which can make it easier to replenish catalyst (and activity) continuously or intermittently. The preferred reactor is a trickle bed (or flooded bed) reactor, as the high catalyst holdup and the employed conditions do not result in significant catalyst deactivation.
[0073] Alternatively, when catalyst deactivation is significant, parallel reactors can be used, or the catalyst may be changed or regenerated as needed. Ways of heat removal in the reaction known in the art can also be employed. In practice, the inorganic molten salt hydrate can adsorb a significant part of the heat released during glucose hydrogenation, when the inorganic molten salt hydrate to biomass ratios of the invention are used. Additional procedures, such as product recycle, high gas / feed ratio can also be employed to minimize the heat increase due to glucose hydrogenation.
[0074] Suitable hydrogenation catalysts are the catalysts well known in sugar hydrogenation, such as Ru/C, Raney Ni or Raney Cu, Ni supported on carbon or alumina. Preferably the active catalyst component is selected from the noble metals of the series Ru, Rh, Pd and Pt, or a transition metal of the series Cu, Cr, Co, Ni, Fe. The preferred catalyst is Ru/C, as it is known to be less prone to leaching. Suitable support materials include activated carbon, aluminum oxide, hydrotalcites, silicates, titanates, zirconates, and other metallic oxides such as Snθ2, Bi2O5, Sb2O5, MoO3, WO3, mixed oxides such as SiO2-AI2O3 SiO2-TiO2, AI2O3-ZnO, SiO2-ZrO2, SiO2- SnO2, SiO2- MoO3, SiO2-WO3, metallic salts such as AIPO4, FePO4, Zn3(PO4)2, Mg3(PO4)2, Ti3(PO4)4, Zr3(PO4. Basic oxides can also be used, such as MgO, BeO, La2O3, CeO2, Pr2O3, Nd2O3, SmO2, ZrO2. Homogeneous, non-supported catalysts can also be used, but they are usually not stable at the temperatures, preferably higher than 2000C, required for the dehydration step. [0075] The desired reaction product is a product with at least 98 wt% of glucose or monosaccharide sugars present, available for conversion to sorbitol or the correspondent sugar alcohols. C6 sugars are hydrogenated to hexitols and C5 sugars are hydrogenated to pentitols,
[0076] Another possible embodiment of the invention is a one-pot combination of hydrolysis and hydrogenation, as it is possible to hydrogenate glucose to sorbitol even in the presence of the acid necessary for hydrolysis. In such a case it may be necessary to remove the lignin prior to contact of the lignocellulosic material with the molten salt hydrate, the acid and the hydrogenation catalyst (as it is difficult to separate the solid catalyst from the solid lignin). Lignin removal by just dissolving the lignocellulosic material without effecting concomitant hydrolysis is not practical due to the high viscosity of the solution of unconverted cellulose in the hydrated molten salts.
[0077] After hydrogenation of glucose to sorbitol, or other monosaccharides to the correspondent sugar alcohols, dehydration is performed to produce the desired isosorbide or correspondent (di) anhydro sugar alcohol. One or two dehydrations are possible from the starting sugar alcohol, to first form an anhydro sugar alcohol and finally a dianhydro sugar alcohol.
[0078] The inorganic molten salt hydrate and sugar alcohols solution is sent to an additional reactor to effect the dehydration of sugar alcohols (sorbitol) to isosorbide or the correspondent anhydro sugar alcohols. Temperatures from 160 to 3200C can be used, preferably from 220 to 2800C. Pressures of 0.1 to 10 MPa are suitable, preferably from 2 to 6 MPa. Preferably hydrogen atmosphere is employed, as it advantageously increases the yield of isosorbide. Additional conditions are LHSV from 0.1 to 5 h-1.
[0079] Preferably the product of the hydrogenation step - inorganic molten salt hydrate and sugar alcohols solution and remaining hydrogen are sent to the dehydration reactor. Conventional methods can be used to increase the temperature to the desired temperature range. Methods such as heat exchange with reaction product, furnaces, heating devices in the reactor, tube reactor, addition of a hot recycle flow and the like can be used, as long as the disclosed pressure, temperature, residence time (LHSV) are used. Full conversion of sorbitol is attained in the disclosed conditions.
[0080] Preferably a transition metal salt is used together with the inorganic molten salt hydrate and sorbitol or polyol solutions. The molar ratio of additional salt cation to polyol is from 0.01 to 5, preferably 0.1 to 1.0, more preferably 0.2 to 0.5. The combination of the inorganic molten salt hydrate media and the additional transition metal salt results in increased selectivity and conversion. It is also believed that the presence of hydrogen during the dehydration step further enhances the dehydration activity and selectivity. It is possible to form some amount of reduced metal during this step. Such metals can be separated by filtration and can be converted again to salt by contact with acid. In any event, the preferred additional salts, pressure and temperature are such that the formation of reduced metals is minimized.
[0081] After the dehydration, the resulting isosorbide or equivalent anhydro sugar alcohols can be separated from the molten salt hydrate media by known separation techniques. A preferred separation technique is extraction with hydrocarbons at temperatures higher than 1000C, where the solubility of isosorbide is significant. The hydrocarbons are then cooled and the isosorbide or equivalent anhydro sugar alcohols are recovered by precipitation. A preferred hydrocarbon to effect the separation is xylene. Another preferred separation technique involves the vaporization of isosorbide, which has a vapor pressure significantly higher than sorbitol or anhydrosorbitol.
[0082] Stripping with water vapor or air at low pressure and high temperature can be used. In this case it is necessary to work at a temperature higher than the melting temperature of the (molten) salt, as water will also be removed. For ZnCI2 the melting point is 275°C.
[0083] After stripping of the desired compounds water can be re-added to the inorganic molten salt hydrate media. It is also possible to use an additional salt such as KCI in the hydrated inorganic molten salt to lower the melting point of anhydrous molten salt ZnCI2. [0084] One water molecule is consumed in the hydrolysis of each glucosidic moiety to form glucose when the glucosidic bond is broken, but two water molecules are generated in sorbitol dehydration, so there is a need to continuously remove water from the molten salt hydrate, in order to continuously maintain the desired molten salt hydrate composition. This can be effected by heating and stripping the hydrated molten salt with inert gas or oxygen to remove the required amount of water. This can be effected in combination with the removal of isosorbide, for example, when it is removed by vaporization of the compound, or during a regeneration step of the inorganic molten salt hydrate, if necessary.
[0085] The pentitols (originating from the hydrolysis of hemicellulose) dehydration yields just monoanhydrides, which are more difficult to separate, and thus it is preferred to effect first a hemicellulose removal, prior to contacting the cellulose feedstock with the inorganic molten salt hydrate media.
[0086] It may also be necessary to remove non-converted soluble compounds, oligomers and carbonaceous material from the inorganic molten salt hydrate, or even monoanhydrides. This may be the case during a regeneration step. One of the ways of effecting such regeneration comprises dilution in water to make oligomers insoluble, followed by water removal. Another way of effecting such a regeneration is similar to the processes used to regenerate ZnCI2 when used as a solvent in coal hydrocracking: oxidation of organic material by contact with air at higher temperatures - it may be necessary to add HCI in the burning cycle to prevent the formation of ZnO, and replenish removed water later.
[0087] The hydrated inorganic molten salt, after separation, is recycled to the beginning of the process. To make the continuous nature of the disclosure more apparent, the process steps of the preferred mode of the invention are described hereafter, making reference to FIGURE 1.
[0088] Line 1 represents the flux of lignocellulosic biomass material. Consider in the preferred embodiment of the disclosure that it has been separated from the hemicellulose first. The lignocellulosic material (1) is mixed with the inorganic molten salt hydrate mixture (2) and sent together or separately to the reactor (10) to effect dissolution and, together with hydrochloric acid (3), effect the hydrolysis. [0089] The mixture of inorganic molten salt hydrate, glucose and acid are discharged from the hydrolysis reactor, and sent to the separation (20) of lignin (4), used elsewhere in the process, and removal of hydrochloric acid (3) to be recycled to the hydrolysis step. A small make-up of hydrochloric acid may be necessary (17) to compensate for losses.
[0090] The mixture of inorganic molten salt hydrate and glucose (5) is mixed with recycle hydrogen (8) and make-up hydrogen (18) and sent to the hydrogenation reactor (30). In the hydrogenation reactor (30) glucose is converted to sorbitol. Steps of heat transfer and heat recovery to the reactor feed and from the reactor product are not shown, but are obvious to those skilled in the art.
[0091] The mixture of inorganic molten salt hydrate and sorbitol (6) is sent to the dehydration reactor (40), where at proper higher temperature conditions sorbitol is converted to isosorbide. The mixture of inorganic molten salt hydrate, isosorbide and hydrogen (7) is sent to a separator. Steps of heat transfer and heat recovery to the reactor feed and from the reactor product are not shown, but are well known to those skilled in the art. Recovered hydrogen (8) is separated from the inorganic molten salt hydrate and isosorbide mixture (9) in separator (50). Inorganic molten salt hydrate and isosorbide mixture (9) are sent to a separation step (60), where isosorbide and anhydro sugar alcohols (11) are separated from the hydrated molten salt mixture (12).
[0092] Although other ways can be used to separate isosorbide from the inorganic molten salt hydrate, the procedure disclosed in (60) involves contacting the inorganic molten salt hydrate and isosorbide mixture (9) with xylene or a similar hydrocarbon in a suitable contact device (62) at a temperature higher than 1200C. The apolar hydrocarbon/sorbitol phase (61) is separated and sent to a contact device at a low temperature (64).
[0093] The isosorbide crystals precipitate at temperatures lower than 6O0C. The temperatures, pressures, contacting times and number of contact stages at (62) and (64), together with flow of (61) and (63) can be selected such that all the isosorbide is removed from the inorganic molten salt hydrate. [0094] There is water consumption in the hydrolysis (10), but 2 water molecules are generated in sorbitol dehydration at (40), so there is a need to continuously remove water from the inorganic molten salt hydrate at (70), resulting in a recovered water flow (13), in order to continuously maintain the desired inorganic molten salt hydrate composition (14).
[0095] A regeneration of part of the inorganic molten salt hydrate might be useful, being effected at (80), from a fraction of the inorganic molten salt hydrate main flow (15), resulting in a regenerated inorganic molten salt hydrate (16), returning again to the main inorganic molten salt hydrate recycle (2). A small make-up (19) of inorganic molten salt hydrate may be necessary, from salt lost and recovered from lignin burning, for example. The inorganic molten salt hydrate in the desired composition (2) is then continuously added to the lignocellulosic material (1), resulting in a fully continuous process.
[0096] It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that variations in the process scheme are possible without departing from the scope of invention.
[0097] Other claimed variation of the invention process is the processing of particular biomasses that produce saccharose such as sugarcane or sugar beet. In this case saccharose would be first separated from the biomass and could be combined with biomass after hemicellulose removal and subjected to hydrolysis. The saccharose will hydrolyze to glucose and fructose. Glucose and fructose are further hydrogenated to a mixture of sorbitol and mannitol. Double dehydration of sorbitol and mannitol yields respectively isosorbide and isomannide (dianhydromannitol or 1,4:3,6-dianhydro-D-mannitol). Isomannide can be further separated the same way as the isosorbide.
[0098] Without wishing to limit the claims of the present invention to a mechanism of improved production of isosorbide from cellulose material, it is believed that the dissolution of cellulose and full hydrolysis is possible thanks to:
(a) interaction of the hydrated inorganic molten salt ions with the hydroxyl groups, resulting in a dissolved material, accessible to acid hydrolysis; (b) the hydrated inorganic molten salt media (including the additional transition metal salt) being an electron acceptor - strongly interacting with the hydroxyl groups, weakening the C-O bond, and allowing intramolecular nucleophilic substitution, and thus catalyzing the internal dehydration of sorbitol molecules to the first and the second dehydration (isosorbide) products;
(c) the presence of hydrogen is believed to favor the formation of +1 charged cations in the inorganic molten salt hydrate media which have significant polarity and electron acceptor capabilities;
(d) the dehydration takes place in the absence of added acids, and thus degradation and tarring is not favored;
(e) the sorbitol molecule conformation, due to interaction of hydroxyls with the inorganic molten salt hydrate cations, favors the 1 ,4 and 3,6 dehydration in the sorbitol over 1 ,5 or 2,5;
(T) the sorbitol dilution by effect of inorganic molten salt hydrate also makes the oligomerization products unfavorable;
[0099] In order to illustrate the application of the present invention, the use of inorganic molten salt hydrate media to effect the sequential dissolution, hydrolysis, hydrogenation and dehydration of cellulose material, the effect of the inorganic molten salt hydrate is set forth by the results of the Examples and Figures described hereafter.
[ooioo] Further interpretations of the nature and the mechanism of the increased yield of isosorbide or analogous dehydrated polyols do not alter the novelty of the present invention which will be now illustrated by the following Examples, which should not be considered as limiting the claims.
EXAMPLES
EXAMPLE 1 - Effect of inorganic molten salt hydrate on cellulose dissolution - comparison with cellulose stability in other solvents. [ooioi] Cellulose, long fibers, was mixed in different solvents to form a 5 wt% content mixture and immediately sent to an optical microscopy controlled heating cell. After the heating step, solutions were heated from 25°C up to 1300C at 5°C/minute and kept in this condition for 10 minutes.
[00102] Table 1 shows the observed results.
TABLE 1
Figure imgf000023_0001
[00103] An organic ionic liquid solvent known to dissolve cellulose made no change in the material in the same time frame, even after 10 minutes at 1300C. On the other hand the dissolution of cellulose in ZnCI2 is fast and complete. The example shows that dissolution was complete in a small time frame.
EXAMPLE 2 - Effect of different salt concentrations in cellulose hydrolysis.
[00104] In a stirred reactor, 0.5 g of cellulose was added to 6.0 g of salt solutions with different concentrations. Concentrated hydrochloric acid was added to each of the solutions to result in 0.4 molal of HCI. Hydrolysis time was 30 minutes at a temperature of 1000C. FIG. 2 shows the HPLC results referenced to maximum glucose yield. It can be seen that at salt concentrations lower than 50 wt% no glucose was produced. Increasing the salt content increased the hydrolysis, and above 67 wt% the further increase was small.
[00105] Without intending to limit the scope of the invention by any explanation, it is believed that a concentration of salt of at least 65 wt% is necessary to ensure a fast and complete dissolution. At higher salt concentrations, no additional gain was obtained.
EXAMPLE 3 - Effect of time on the hydrolysis.
[00106] In a stirred reactor, 0.5 g of cellulose was added to 6.0 g of salt solution with 70wt% Of ZnCI2 , and hydrochloric acid content of 0.4 molal, with a temperature of 1000C. The reaction was repeated four different times. The results are shown in FIG.3. It can be seen that it is possible to completely hydrolyze the cellulose to glucose by the present invention, resulting in a solution of sugar and inorganic molten salt hydrate. Sugar oligomer peaks detected in HPLC also disappeared at 90 minutes. Small amounts of probably decomposition products were formed at longer times.
EXAMPLE 4 - Hydrolysis in inorganic molten salt media of lignocellulosic biomass.
[00107] Ball milled pine wood samples (0.5 g) were mixed with 6.0 g of salt solution with 70 wt% of ZnCI2 and hydrochloric acid content of 0.4 molal. The reaction was effected for 30, 60 and 90 minutes. The product was ultracentrifuged and full separation of a black/violet material, lignin, at the top, and a clear salt/sugar solution at the bottom. When salt solutions were dissolved in 10 times the water weight, some cellulose precipitated in the 30 minute product, and no precipitation took place in the 60 and 90 minutes products. At 30 minutes glucose oligomers, glucose and C5 and lower sugar peaks were observed in HPLC. At 60 and 90 minutes the same HPLC peak areas were obtained, higher than in 30 minutes and no oligomers could be seen, meaning full hydrolysis had taken place. [00108] The results show that in the first hydrolysis step of invention process it is possible to obtain from real biomass the full conversion of cellulose and hemicellulose to the corresponding monosaccharide sugars and separation of lignin from the sugars.
EXAMPLE 5 - Effect of acid content on hydrolysis.
[00109] Cellulose (0.5 g) and 6.0 g of hydrated inorganic molten salt solutions of 70 wt% ZnCI2 of different hydrochloric acid contents (zero, 0.2, 0.4 and 0.8 molal) were mixed and subjected to hydrolysis for 1 h at 1000C. Results are presented in FIG. 4.
[ooiio] It can be seen that without additional acid no hydrolysis is effected, just dissolution takes place. Molality of just 0.2 molal is insufficient but above 0.4 full hydrolysis at these conditions takes place.
EXAMPLE 6 - Effect of acid content on glucose hydrogenation in the hydrated inorganic molten salt media of invention.
[ooiii] Glucose (0.5 g) with 0.25 g of Ru/C catalyst and 6.0 g of hydrated inorganic molten salt solutions of 70 wt% ZnCI2 of different hydrochloric acid contents (no acid, 0.2, 0.4 and 0.8 molal) were mixed and subjected to hydrogenation at 50 bar for 1 h at 1000C. Results are presented in FIG. 4. It can be seen that the additional acid inhibits the hydrogenation of glucose to sorbitol. According to the invention, it is preferred to remove the acid before the hydrogenation step of the present embodiment.
EXAMPLE 7 - Effect of hydrated inorganic molten salt concentration on the hydrogenation step of sugar to polyol of invention.
[00112] Glucose sugar (0.5 g) with 0.25 g of Ru/C catalyst and 6.0 g of hydrated inorganic molten salt solutions of different ZnCI2 content and no hydrochloric acid were mixed and subjected to hydrogenation at 50 bar for 1 h at 100°C. Results of conversion to sorbitol are presented in FIG. 5. [00113] Without ZnCI2, hydrogenation was faster, apparently being completed in 30 minutes, as there was no further change in reactor pressure profile after this time. Further addition Of ZnCI2 inhibited the reaction, but small concentrations Of ZnCI2 (10 wt%) inhibited the reaction in the same way as the higher concentration solutions (70 o/ Or ).
[00114] According to the invention, it is possible to effect the hydrogenation of glucose to sorbitol in hydrated inorganic molten salt and glucose mixtures, although in a less efficient way (needing to be compensated with a higher LHSV - time and/or catalyst).
[00115] Besides the inhibiting effect of the salt, there is no gain in diluting the solution prior to hydrogenation or trying to remove the salt partially.
EXAMPLE 8 - Catalytic sorbitol hydrogenolysis at higher temperature in hydrated inorganic molten salt.
[00116] Sorbitol (0.5 g) with 0.25 g of Ru/C catalyst was mixed with 6.0 g of water or hydrated inorganic molten salt solutions of varying ZnCI2 concentrations at 22O0C, 50 bar and 1h reaction time. With water, significant conversion to hydrogenolysis (isomerization and the production of lower molar weight polyols) products is evidenced. As the salt content is increased, hydrogenolysis is severely inhibited, and at 70 wt% ZnCI2 inorganic molten salt medium, small amounts of just 2 products remain: anhydroglucitols, products of dehydration of sorbitol, having one (sorbitans) or two (isosorbide) fewer water molecules. The results show that the hydrated inorganic molten salt media inhibit the hydrogenolysis products and favor the formation of dehydration products, under hydrogenation conditions.
EXAMPLE 9 - Process of dehydration of sorbitol in hydrated inorganic molten salt media and effect of additional salts and comparison with dehydration in aqueous media in hydrogen and nitrogen atmosphere. [00117] Sorbitol (0.5 g) was mixed with 6.0 g of ZnCI2 70 wt% or water. CuCI2 was added in some tests as an additional salt, in a quantity of 1 mol per 2 mol of sorbitol. Temperature of reaction was 2500C for 1 h reaction time, and pressure 50 bar of H2 or N2. HPLC results showed just 3 peaks, assigned to sorbitol, anhydrosorbitols (sorbitans) and isosorbide (1 ,4:3,6-dianhydrosorbitol).
[00118] Results of HPLC normalized are presented on TABLE 2.
TABLE 2
Test medium additional salt atmosphere Sorbitol Sorbitan Isosorbide mol % mol % mol %
1 water Cu 1 : 2 Sorbitol Hydrogen 6.5 48.52 44.97
2 ZnCI2 70 wt% none Hydrogen 2.5 25.26 72.25
3 ZnCI2 70 wt% Cu 1 : 2 Sorbitol Hydrogen 0.6 4.47 94.93
4 water Cu 1 : 2 Sorbitol Nitrogen 24.44 9.39 66.16
5 ZnCI2 70 wt% none Nitrogen 12.4 47.53 40.06
6 ZnCI2 70 wt% Cu 1 : 2 Sorbitol Nitrogen 1.74 13.85 84.41
[00H9] The hydrated inorganic molten salt is able to effect the dehydration of sorbitol - and surprisingly to a higher extent in hydrogen atmosphere instead of nitrogen atmosphere. It can be seen that the addition of additional CuCI2 salt increased the dehydration activity. The best results were obtained with the additional salt dissolved in ZnCI2 hydrated inorganic molten salt in hydrogen atmosphere of the present invention.
EXAMPLE 10 - Invention process of sorbitol dehydration in different hydrated inorganic molten salt medium and several additional salts.
[00120] Sorbitol (0.5 g) was mixed with 6.0 g of different salts (ZnCI2 70 wt% or CaCI242.7 wt% or LiCI 45.4 wt%) and additional salts in a cation / sorbitol ratio of 0.1. Reaction pressure was 50 bar of hydrogen atmosphere and temperature of 23O0C for 1 h time.
[00121] Results of sorbitol conversion for each salt media and additional salts are presented in TABLE 3. [00122] TABLE 3
Sorbitol conversion ZnCI2 CaCI2 LiCI
RuCI3 1 :10 21.9 11.7 7.7
CoCI2 1 :10 42.4 0.1 1.3
CuCI2 1 :10 88.7 7.6 7.4
NbCI5 1 :10 64.7 13.5 5
NiCI2 1 :10 84.2 5.6 8
[00123] It can be seen that CuCI2 and NiCI2 are the most active salts. Conversion of sorbitol was significant just in ZnCI2 hydrated inorganic molten salt media. CaCI2 and LiCI hydrated inorganic molten salt media were not effective for sorbitol conversion, even though these salts were reported in the prior art as superior to ZnCI2 in the hydrated inorganic molten salt hydrolysis of cellulose. A salt known to be more easily reduced, like RuCI3, to RuO, did not show a high sorbitol conversion, so formation of in situ HCI is not the main mechanism of sorbitol conversion by dehydration of the present invention.
EXAMPLE 11 - Effect time on dehydration in inorganic molten salt hydrate.
[00124] Inorganic molten salt hydrate of ZnCI2 70 wt% (6.0 g) was mixed with 0.5 g of sorbitol and a mass equivalent of 1 mol of CuCI2 per 2 mol of sorbitol. Reaction temperature was 235°C and pressure 50 bar. The products analysis results for several reaction times are presented in FIG. 6.
[00125] The Figure shows the following product profiles, with sorbitol being dehydrated to the first dehydration product (sorbitan), followed by further dehydration of sorbitans to isosorbide. The main products of first dehydration are 1 ,4 and 3,6 anhydrosorbitol, and not 2,5 or 1 ,5 anhydro products - which further dehydration does not proceed according to the art.
EXAMPLE 12 - Effect of additional salt content on dehydration in inorganic molten salt hydrate. [00126] Inorganic molten salt hydrate of ZnCb 70 wt% (6.0 g) was mixed with 0.5 g of sorbitol and different contents of C11CI2 (from zero to 1 mol of Cu per mol of sorbitol). Reaction time was 1h, temperature of 235°C and pressure of 50 bar. The results are shown in FIG. 7.
[00127] It can be seen that increased content of an additional salt resulted in increased dehydration activity. Main gain in dehydration activity happened in 0.5 mol of Cu /mol of sorbitol in the feed. It was possible to completely convert the sorbitol and produce mostly isosorbide in 1 h reaction time at 235°C.
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Claims

What is claimed is:
1. A process for converting polysaccharides to a platform chemical, said process comprising the steps of: a) dissolving polysaccharides in a inorganic molten salt hydrate; b) converting the dissolved polysaccharides to monosaccharides; c) converting the monosaccharides to platform chemicals that are easily separable from the inorganic molten salt hydrate; d) separating the platform chemicals from the inorganic molten salt hydrate.
2. The process of claim 1 wherein an inorganic soluble acid is present in the inorganic molten salt hydrate during step b).
3. The process of claim 2 wherein the concentration of the inorganic soluble acid in the inorganic molten salt is from 0.1 to 2.0 molal.
4. The process of any one of the preceding claims wherein step b) is carried out at a temperature in the range of from 50 to 150 0C and LHSV in the range of from 0.2 to 2 If1.
5. The process of any one of the preceding claims wherein step c) comprises hydrogenation to form a polyol.
6. The process of claim 5 wherein step c) is carried out at a temperature in the range of from 60 to 160 0C, a pressure of 1.0 to 20 MPa, and LHSV of 0.05 to 5 h"1.
7. The process of claim 5 or 6 wherein during step c), after formation of the polyol, the temperature is increased to the range of 160 to 320 0C to effect dehydration of the polyol.
8. The process of any one of the preceding claims whereby inorganic molten salt recovered in step d) is recycled to step a).
9 The process of any one of the preceding claims wherein said inorganic molten salt hydrate is selected from the group consisting of the halides of Zn1 Ca, and Li and mixtures thereof.
10. The process of any one of the preceding claims wherein said inorganic molten salt hydrate has a salt content of 40 to 80 wt%.
11. The process according to claim 2 or 3 wherein at least 50 % of the inorganic soluble acid is removed prior to step c).
12. The process according to claim 11 wherein at least 90 % of the inorganic soluble acid is removed prior to step c).
13. A process according to any one of the preceding claims 1 wherein a transition metal salt is present in the inorganic molten salt solution in the molar ratio of transition metal to polyol from 0.01 to 5.
14. A process according to claim 13 wherein the transition metal salt anion is a halide.
15. A process according to claim 13 or 14 wherein the transition metal is selected from the group consisting of Cu, Ni, Co, Fe, V, and mixtures thereof.
16. A process according to claim 15 wherein the transition metal salt is CuCI2.
17. A process according to claim 15 where the transition metal salt is NiCI2.
18. The process of claim 5 wherein the hydrogenation is carried out in the presence of a hydrogenation catalyst.
19. The process of claim 18 wherein the hydrogenation catalyst is Ru/C.
20. The process according to claim 18 wherein the hydrogenation catalyst is selected from a noble metal of the series of Ru, Rh, Pd and
Pt or a transition metal of the series Cu, Cr, Co, Ni and Fe.
21. The process according to claim 18 wherein the hydrogenation catalyst comprises a support selected from activated carbon, aluminum oxide, hydrotalcites, silicates, titanates, zirconates and other metallic oxides such as SnO2, Bi2O5, Sb2O5, MoO3, WO3, mixed oxides such as SiO2-AI2O3, SiO2-TiO2, AI2O3-ZnO, SiO2-ZrO2, SiO2-SnO2, SiO2-MoO3, SiO2-WO3, metallic salts such as AIPO4, FePO4, Zn3(PO4)2, Mg3(PO4)2, Ti3(PO4)4, Zr3(PO4) and basic oxides such as MgO, BeO, La2O3, CeO2, Pr2O3, Nd2O3, SmO2, ZrO2.
22. A process according to any one of the preceding claims wherein step d) comprises contacting the reaction product of step c) with a hydrocarbon solvent at temperatures higher than 600C.
23. A process according to any one of the preceding claims wherein step d) comprises stripping the reaction product of step d) with a gas selected from nitrogen, air and water vapor.
24. A process according to any one of the preceding claims wherein step d) comprises flashing or vacuum distillation without condenser of the reaction product of step c).
25. A process according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the lignocellulosic biomass material comprises hemicellulose.
26. The process of any one of the preceding claims whereby cellulose is converted to sorbitol and/or anhydrosorbitol and dianhydrosorbitol (isosorbide).
27. The process of any one of the preceding claims whereby hemicellulose is converted to xylitol and/or anhydroxylitol.
28. The process of any of the preceding claims whereby saccharose is converted to isosorbide and isomannide.
PCT/EP2009/053027 2008-03-13 2009-03-13 Process for converting polysaccharides in an inorganic molten salt hydrate WO2009112588A1 (en)

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CA2718145A CA2718145A1 (en) 2008-03-13 2009-03-13 Process for converting polysaccharides in an inorganic molten salt hydrate
RU2010141854/13A RU2503722C2 (en) 2008-03-13 2009-03-13 Method of converting polysaccharides in molten inorganic salt hydrate
EP09720250.1A EP2283164B1 (en) 2008-03-13 2009-03-13 Process for converting polysaccharides in an inorganic molten salt hydrate
BRPI0909325-7A BRPI0909325A2 (en) 2008-03-13 2009-03-13 Process for converting polysaccharides into a platform chemical
ES09720250.1T ES2542981T3 (en) 2008-03-13 2009-03-13 Procedure to convert polysaccharides into an inorganic molten salt hydrate
US12/880,241 US8445704B2 (en) 2008-03-13 2010-09-13 Process for converting polysaccharides in an inorganic molten salt hydrate
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