About structural changes of lignin during kraft cooking and the kinetics of delignification KKA PO, 1990, PAPERI JA PUU-PAPER AND TIMBER, V72, P773
Journal article, 2017

Wood meal was submitted to kraft cooking in a small-scale flow-through reactor and the structural changes of lignin have been investigated. The rate determining steps in kraft cooking were in focus. Based on two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (2D-NMR) measurements on lignin fractions extracted at different cooking times from the black liquor, it was observed that the main lignin reactions occur within 10-20 min and thus the kinetics of the chemical reaction cannot be the rate-determining step. On the other hand, the molecular weight (MW) of lignin is shifted towards larger fragments in the course of cooking time but the MW decreases with increasing ionic strength. Obviously, the kinetics of the delignification are strongly dependent on solubility and/or mass transport at the cell wall level. At chip size level, the mass transport of cooking chemicals into the wood chip may influence the overall kinetics in the initial part of the cooking. At longer cooking times the concentration of chemicals becomes sufficiently high in the wood chips, and the delignification is progressively governed by solubility and/or mass transport of lignin molecules occurring at the cell wall level.

Size-Exclusion Chromatography

kraft

C-13 NMR

ATR-IR

Mobile-Phase

flow-through reactor

Lithium Chloride/N

2D HSQC NMR

dissolved kraft lignin

delignification

N-Dimethylacetamide

kinetics

Author

Cecilia Mattsson

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Chemical Technology

Merima Hasani

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Chemical Technology

Binh Dang

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Chemical Technology

Maxim Mayzel

University of Gothenburg

Hans Theliander

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Chemical Technology

Holzforschung

0018-3830 (ISSN) 1437-434X (eISSN)

Vol. 71 7-8 545-553

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Paper, Pulp and Fiber Technology

DOI

10.1515/hf-2016-0190

More information

Created

10/8/2017