Search results for "Commodity chemicals"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

CO2: from waste to resource for methanol-based processes

2009

This paper reports on research aiming at developing sustainable processes for the production of methanol (CH3OH) and dimethyl carbonate (DMC, (CH3)2CO3) using carbon dioxide (CO2) as a raw material. Using carbon dioxide as a raw material has several advantages; it is non-toxic, in abundant supply, and promises innovative routes to the production of commodity chemicals. Methanol and dimethyl carbonate are important products and feedstocks of the chemical industry. Methanol is produced commercially from synthesis gas, but it is also possible to use carbon dioxide as a feedstock. Conventional production of dimethyl carbonate involves the use of toxic phosgene or carbon monoxide, while the met…

Materials scienceWaste management010405 organic chemistryCommodity chemicalsRaw material010402 general chemistry01 natural sciences0104 chemical scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryCarbon dioxideMethanolDimethyl carbonateCarbon-neutral fuelWaste Management and DisposalCivil and Structural EngineeringSyngasCarbon monoxideProceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Waste and Resource Management
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Merging shuttle reactions and paired electrolysis for reversible vicinal dihalogenations

2021

Vicinal dibromides and dichlorides are important commodity chemicals and indispensable synthetic intermediates in modern chemistry that are traditionally synthesized using hazardous elemental chlorine and bromine. Meanwhile, the environmental persistence of halogenated pollutants necessitates improved approaches to accelerate their remediation. Here, we introduce an electrochemically assisted shuttle (e-shuttle) paradigm for the facile and scalable interconversion of alkenes and vicinal dihalides, a class of reactions that can be used both to synthesize useful dihalogenated molecules from simple alkenes and to recycle waste material through retro-dihalogenation. The reaction is demonstrated…

chemistry.chemical_classificationElectrolysisMultidisciplinaryBromine010405 organic chemistryCommodity chemicalsAlkenechemistry.chemical_element010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesCombinatorial chemistry0104 chemical scienceslaw.inventionchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistry13. Climate actionlawChlorineMoleculeBenzeneVicinalScience
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Glycolipid Biosurfactant Production from Waste Cooking Oils by Yeast: Review of Substrates, Producers and Products

2021

Biosurfactants are a microbially synthesized alternative to synthetic surfactants, one of the most important bulk chemicals. Some yeast species are proven to be exceptional biosurfactant producers, while others are emerging producers. A set of factors affects the type, amount, and properties of the biosurfactant produced, as well as the environmental impact and costs of biosurfactant’s production. Exploring waste cooking oil as a substrate for biosurfactants’ production serves as an effective cost-cutting strategy, yet it has some limitations. This review explores the existing knowledge on utilizing waste cooking oil as a feedstock to produce glycolipid biosurfactants by yeast. The review f…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineTP500-660Cooking oilChemistryCommodity chemicalsFermentation industries. Beverages. Alcoholcircular economyPlant Sciencemicrobial surfactantsSubstrate (biology)Raw materialPulp and paper industry01 natural sciencesBiochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous)Yeastwaste valorization03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologyGlycolipidused cooking oil010608 biotechnologynonconventional yeastsFood ScienceFermentation
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