Transformation of Chitin and Waste Shrimp Shells into Acetic Acid and Pyrrole
- 1. Shanghai Jiao Tong University
- 2. National University of Singapore
Description
Global shellfishery waste generation is from 6 to 8 million metric tons annually. Chitin, as a major component in crustacean shells, is the second most abundant biopolymer on Earth, having the potential to supplement the lignocellulosic biomass resource for renewable chemicals. Herein, we established direct transformation of chitin and raw shrimp shells into acetic acid (HAc) by a catalytic method using metal oxide and oxygen gas in basic water. The work showcased that chitin is a superior starting material to other major biomass resources for HAc production. A 38.1% yield of HAc was produced from chitin, which was more than a 2-fold increase compared with that from cellulose. Moreover, a 47.9% yield was directly obtained from crude shrimp shells. Another finding is that heterocyclic compound pyrrole was generated as the major nitrogen-containing (N-containing) product in the reaction system, which offers a potential chemical route for one-step pyrrole formation from a sustainable resource. The study open...
Open Access
Licence Attribution (ACS-SPECIFIC: AUTHORCHOICE/EDITORS CHOICE USAGE AGREEMENT)
Publisher Website
Access full text
Publication Details
Journal article
Journal:
ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering
Publisher:
American Chemical Society (ACS)
ISSN:
21680485
Volume:
4
Pages:
3912-3920
Persistent Identifiers
Funding
Financial Support
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization — Grant: R-279-000-433-597
Read more
National University of Singapore — Grant: R-279-000-464-133
Read more
Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality — Grant: 14JC1403100
Read more
National Natural Science Foundation of China — Grant: 21277091
Read more
National Natural Science Foundation of China — Grant: 21436007
Read more
References