Oxidized derivatives of lipophilic extractives formed during hardwood Kraft pulp bleaching

abstract

The structural changes of E. globulus wood extractives during bleaching with chlorine dioxide (D), oxygen (O), ozone (Z) and hydrogen peroxide (P) were studied. The detailed characterisation of the extractive derivatives detected in the partially bleached D, O, P and Z pulps was achieved by performing reactions of pure reference compounds with the different bleaching agents. The results show that the unsaturated sterols and fatty acids are extensively degraded during chlorine dioxide and ozone bleaching and only partially degraded during oxygen and hydrogen peroxide bleaching. The corresponding saturated extractives as well as the long chain aliphatic alcohols and omega-hydroxyfatty acids were stable during bleaching. The main oxidation products of beta-sitosterol and oleic and linoleic acids, including one chlorinated derivative of linoleic acid, were identified here for the first time in E. globulus bleached pulps and bleaching filtrates.

keywords

SOLID-PHASE EXTRACTION; EUCALYPTUS-GLOBULUS; PITCH DEPOSITS; CHEMICAL-COMPOSITION; GAS-CHROMATOGRAPHY; WOOD; MILL

subject category

Forestry; Materials Science

authors

Freire, CSR; Silvestre, AJD; Neto, CP

our authors

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