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Lignin-first biorefining of Nordic poplar to produce cellulose fibers could displace cotton production on agricultural lands

Authors :
Anneli Adler
Ivan Kumaniaev
Almir Karacic
Kiran Reddy Baddigam
Rebecca J. Hanes
Elena Subbotina
Andrew W. Bartling
Alberto J. Huertas-Alonso
Andres Moreno
Helena Håkansson
Aji P. Mathew
Gregg T. Beckham
Joseph S.M. Samec
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Karlstads universitet, Institutionen för ingenjörs- och kemivetenskaper (from 2013), 2022.

Abstract

Here, we show that lignin-first biorefining of poplar can enable the production of dissolving cellulose pulp that can produce regenerated cellulose, which could substitute cotton. These results in turn indicate that agricultural land dedicated to cotton could be reclaimed for food production by extending poplar plantations to produce textile fibers. Based on climate-adapted poplar clones capable of growth on marginal lands in the Nordic region, we estimate an environmentally sustainable annual biomass production of similar to 11 tonnes/ha. At scale, lignin-first biorefining of this poplar could annually generate 2.4 tonnes/ha of dissolving pulp for textiles and 1.1 m(3) biofuels. Life cycle assessment indicates that, relative to cotton production, this approach could substantially reduce water consumption and identifies certain areas for further improvement. Overall, this work highlights a new value chain to reduce the environmental footprint of textiles, chemicals, and biofuels while enabling land reclamation and water savings from cotton back to food production.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1d1d743b635a2cb7c653757e868d3b07