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The National Agricultural Library is one of four national libraries of the United States, with locations in Beltsville, Maryland and Washington, D.C. It houses one of the world's largest and most accessible agricultural information collections and serves as the nexus for a national network of state land-grant and U.S. Department of Agriculture field libraries. In fiscal year 2011 (Oct 2010 through Sept 2011) NAL delivered more than 100 million direct customer service transactions.

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Journal Article

Journal Article

Liquid fuels, hydrogen and chemicals from lignin: A critical review  [2013]

Azadi, Pooya; Inderwildi, Oliver R.; Farnood, Ramin; King, David A.;

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Our severe dependence on fossil resources for the production of fuels and chemicals is responsible for two major global challenges: declining the fuel supply and increasing the anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions. Conversion of biomass to fuels and chemicals can be a part of the low-carbon solution to both issues. Among various biomass species, inedible biomass such as lignocellulosics is the preferred choice for such applications due to their minimal impact on the food security. While technologies for the conversion of carbohydrates to value-added materials such as pulp, sugar monomers, and ethanol are well-established, lignin upgrading and valorization processes are significantly less-developed, and technical lignins are almost entirely burnt to generate heat and steam. The economic viability of biorefineries – which will receive significant amounts of lignin in future – can potentially improve significantly when advanced technologies are available that aid the conversion of lignin to value-added compounds. In this paper we assess how thermochemical processes can be used to isolate lignin from the lignocellulosic biomass, and subsequently convert it to liquid fuels, hydrogen, and aromatic monomers. To this end, different depolymerization, gasification and upgrading technologies for lignin conversion will be considered. Finally, the foreseeable applications of lignin-based products, the future directions for development, and the potential supportive in
terventions from policy makers are critically assessed.
From the journal
Renewable and sustainable energy reviews
ISSN : 1364-0321

Bibliographic information

Language:
English
Type:
Journal Article
In AGRIS since:
2015
Volume:
21
Start Page:
506
End Page:
523
Publisher:
Elsevier Ltd
All titles:
"Liquid fuels, hydrogen and chemicals from lignin: A critical review"@eng
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Bibliographic information

Language:
English
Type:
Journal Article
In AGRIS since:
2015
Volume:
21
Start Page:
506
End Page:
523
Publisher:
Elsevier Ltd
All titles:
"Liquid fuels, hydrogen and chemicals from lignin: A critical review"@eng