Catalysts and advanced materials from waste: diversifying biochar applications towards the implementation of a circular and bio-based economy.

dc.contributor.advisorKerton, Francesca
dc.contributor.authorVidal, Juliana Ladeira
dc.date.issued2021-08
dc.description.abstractBiochar is a bio-sourced and carbon-based material produced from the thermochemical processing of wood residues. Besides presenting remarkable chemical and physical properties, biochar is a tool for carbon dioxide (CO₂) sequestration. Unfortunately, it has been mainly employed in low value-added fields in pollutant removal and soil amendment. The diversification of biochar applications is aligned with the Principles of Green Chemistry and could help to tackle our society’s current environmental challenges through the achievement of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. The use of a material obtained from waste with recognized carbon sink potential for the further production of energy and chemicals can reduce the impacts of consumption, contribute to our good health and well-being, and also mitigate devastating climate change consequences. A true sustainable future can only be achieved if interdisciplinary and collaborative approaches are considered. In this thesis, strategies in the areas of CO₂ transformation, layered materials exfoliation, polymer composites reinforcement, catalysis, and their respective applications in biochar research are discussed. Biochar after functionalization could be applied as catalyst for the synthesis of cyclic carbonates from epoxides using CO₂ as a feedstock. Besides presenting good efficiency (i.e. conversions higher than 78.5%) and having a wide substrate scope, the catalytic system proposed could be re-used at least five times without any loss in its activity. The same material could be applied in liquidphase exfoliation processes to produce biochar nanostructures with improved chemical and physical properties. Although greener environments for the exfoliation of biochar were obtained and studied through extensive solvent screening, the functionalization of this carbon-based material was able to further increase the yield of nanostructures obtained in benign solvents to human health and the environment. Using different catalysts, the functionalized biochar produced could then be applied as a polymer additive for the production of biodegradable poly(e-caprolactone) composites with increased stiffness, crystallinity and conversions. Preliminary degradation studies also showed a positive effect of the exfoliated functionalized material in the degradation of poly(ecaprolactone) under different conditions. Functionalized biochar also showed good activity (i.e. 75.2% conversion) as the first carbon-based catalyst used for the synthesis of cyclic ethers via ring-closing C-O/C-O metathesis of their aliphatic counterparts, and as an efficient alternative system for the synthesis of terpene esters from terpene alcohols and acetic anhydrides (i.e. conversions higher than 84.3%) under mild conditions.
dc.description.noteIncludes bibliographical references.
dc.format.extentxxviii, 240 pages : color illustrations
dc.format.mediumText
dc.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.48336/9DV5-VH57
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14783/7194
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherMemorial University of Newfoundland
dc.rights.licenseThe author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
dc.subjectbiochar
dc.subjectbiomass
dc.subjectgreen chemistry
dc.subjectsustainable development goals
dc.subjectsustainability
dc.subjectheterogeneous catalyst
dc.subjectbiodegradable polymers
dc.subjectcircular economy
dc.subjectbio-based economy
dc.subject.lcshBiochar
dc.subject.lcshBiomass--Economic aspects
dc.subject.lcshGreen chemistry
dc.subject.lcshSustainability
dc.subject.lcshHeterogeneous catalysis
dc.subject.lcshBiodegradable plastics
dc.subject.lcshPlastics--Biodegradation
dc.subject.lcshUnited Nations
dc.subject.lcshCatalysts
dc.subject.lcshEnvironmental economics
dc.subject.lcshRecycled products.
dc.titleCatalysts and advanced materials from waste: diversifying biochar applications towards the implementation of a circular and bio-based economy.
dc.typeDoctoral thesis
mem.campusSt. John's Campus
mem.convocationDate2022-02
mem.departmentChemistry
mem.divisionsChemistry
mem.facultyFaculty of Science
mem.fullTextStatuspublic
mem.institutionMemorial University of Newfoundland
mem.isPublishedunpub
mem.thesisAuthorizedNameVidal, Juliana Ladeira
thesis.degree.disciplineChemistry
thesis.degree.grantorMemorial University of Newfoundland
thesis.degree.leveldoctoral
thesis.degree.namePh. D.

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