The current vision of biorefineries undervalues lignin’s potential to address the world’s high-quality product requirements. The utilization of waste lignin as a feedstock for conversion to bioproducts and biofuels offers a significant opportunity to enhance the overall operation efficiency, carbon conversion rate, economic viability, and sustainability of biofuels production. The development of selective and robust bio/chemical catalytic processes specifically designed for lignin conversion must be a core effort for biorefineries to develop. The challenge, however, is the propensity of the aromatic lignin macromolecular assembly to condense and degrade, thereby generating high amounts of relatively intractable solid residues in some biorefinery processes. Therefore, depolymerization of lignin and its subsequent conversion into value-added products is vital to enhance the profitability of biorefineries. Valorizing lignin remains a major goal in the realm of bioprocessing. This can be accomplished through continued implementation of creative, bio/chemical catalytic tactics for favorably altering the reactivity and chemistry of lignin to yield transportation biofuels and bioproducts.
Co-Chairs
Ning Sun, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
08:00 AM
Arthur Ragauskas, Xianzhi Meng, Yunxuan Wang, Brent Scheidemantle, Charles M. Cai, Chang Geun Yoo
08:15 AM
Kevin Li, Weiwei Li, Joshua Yuan
08:30 AM
Michaela Vasilaki, Effie Marcoulaki, Antonis Kokossis
09:00 AM
09:15 AM
Anand Narani, Snehashish Mondal, Marcus Foston
09:45 AM
Abdulrahman A. B. A. Mohammed, Xianglan Bai
10:00 AM
Md Mostafizur Rahman, Jasmine Gordon, Toufiq Reza
10:15 AM