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In this apparatus, the production of the new solvent dimethylfuran is being tested on a small scale at the RUB. Credit: Mareile Silvia Rohlf |
So far, only a small part of the established solvents has been bio-based. The project team wants to change that - rethinking the entire process chain from start to finish.
Around 20 million tons of solvents are consumed worldwide every year, of which only a small part has been produced bio-based to date. An international project team wants to provide an alternative to established solvents with dimethylfuran. The substance is bio-based and biodegradable. The Ruhr University Bochum (RUB), the Fraunhofer Institute for Interfacial and Bioprocess Engineering IGB in Straubing and the industrial partner AURO Plant Chemistry AG are cooperating for the project. The German Research Foundation is funding the project from October 2022 to September 2025 with 214,200 euros.
The starting point for the work is the substance 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF), which can be obtained from biomass and converted into dimethylfuran (DMF). Researchers at RUB around Prof. Dr. Martin Muhler and Dr. Baoxiang Peng from the Chair of Technical Chemistry has already been established in a previous project. In the current research project, they want to optimize the catalyst and the reaction conditions in order to lay the foundation for an industrial production of DMF. The IGB team around Dr. Harald Strittmatter and Ferdinand Vogelgsang from the innovation fields "Bioinspired Chemistry" and "Sustainable Catalytic Processes" will scale up the catalytic reaction to a 40-fold larger scale. Together with the industrial partner AURO, the scientists will finally provide ready-made recipes for the use of DMF as a solvent and test them in the production of natural colors.