Affiliation:
1. The Odisha Renewable Energy Research Institute (ORERI), Subarnapur, Odisha, 767018, India
Abstract
Abstract:
Biodiesel and oleo-chemical industries have been producing huge quantities of glycerol as
a by-product. Value-added products can be synthesized from glycerol through different chemical and
enzymatic reactions, such as oxidation, carbonylation, reforming, acetalyzation, etherification, dehydration,
hydrogenolysis, hydrolysis, esterification, and transesterification. Glycerol is a low-cost polyol
that can be converted into glycerol carbonate, which has potential applications in polymer and biobased
non-isocyanate polyurethanes industries (Bio-NIPUs). The present contribution is the first of its
kind to report on the synthesis of glycerol carbonate via catalyst and solvent-free transesterification of
glycerol with dimethyl carbonate under conventional as well as microwave heating. Additionally, a
comparative study of conventional and microwave-assisted transesterification was performed. Under
conventional heating, 78% glycerol carbonate is obtained at 120oC in 36 hours, whereas, using microwaves,
92% of glycerol carbonate can be achieved in 30 minutes. Presently, biomass-based heterogeneous
materials are used in catalysis due to their importance within the context of sustainability. In
line with this, in this work, a series of green catalysts, namely, molecular sieves (MS, 4Å), Hβ-
Zeolite, Montmorillonite K-10 clay, activated carbon prepared from the shell of groundnut (Arachis
hypogaea), and biochar from sawdust pyrolysis were successfully employed. Glycerol carbonate was
thoroughly characterized by 1H and 13C NMR, FT-IR and MS. The method described here is facile
and green since the utilization of bioresource (glycerol) for the production of glycerol carbonate is
performed under microwave.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.