Creating a BPA Alternative: Harnessing Lignin and Catalyst

Creating a BPA Alternative: Harnessing Lignin and Catalyst

A team of microbiologists and chemists at the Center ⁢for Sustainable Catalysis and Engineering, working​ with colleagues ‍from Vrije Universiteit ⁤Brussel, the ​Flemish Institute for Technological Research and Rheology and Technology ‍(SMaRT), KU Leuven, all ‌in⁢ Belgium, has developed a replacement for bisphenol A, a compound used to⁤ make plastics.

In‍ their paper published in the journal Nature ‍Sustainability, the group describes their lignin-based process and its performance.⁣ Bert Weckhuysen, with⁤ Utrecht University, has published⁢ a News​ & Views ​piece in the same journal issue‍ outlining the work done by‍ the ‌team on​ this new effort. Also, the editors at​ Nature have published a Research Highlight ⁤report in the same‍ journal issue summarizing the work.

Bisphenol A (BPA) is a synthetic,⁣ organic compound that is used to make a ‍wide variety of polymers and epoxy resins, which means that⁢ it is used to produce different kinds of plastics. ‍When used in such a‍ fashion, it remains in the finished‌ product. Prior research has⁤ shown that in some products, BPA can be released during use, such as⁢ when drinking from ⁣a plastic bottle, and it is also released when the material is heated.

Consumption of BPA can lead to health problems such as breast and testicular ‍cancer, and in some cases, infertility. Production ⁣of BPA also requires the ​use of fossil⁣ fuels, which contributes to climate change.​ Scientists have⁢ been working to find a suitable replacement for BPA‍ in the manufacture ⁤of plastics‍ that does not ⁢cause other health ‍problems or require the use of fossil fuels to produce.

In this⁢ new effort, the research team developed what they believe to​ be a suitable replacement—a group of compounds called bisguaiacols, all ‍of which are based ‍on the use of lignin, a key component of wood. The bisguaiacols are created by inciting reactions between an⁣ alkene and a bio-based arene (such⁣ as guaiacol)—all set ⁢off by H-USY, a recyclable zeolite catalyst.

2023-09-09​ 22:00:04
Original from phys.org rnrn

Exit mobile version