Beau Op de Beeck
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Beau Op de Beeck.
Energy and Environmental Science | 2015
Beau Op de Beeck; Michiel Dusselier; Jan Geboers; Jensen Holsbeek; Eline Morré; Steffen Oswald; Lars Giebeler; Bert F. Sels
High yields of liquid straight-chain alkanes were obtained directly from cellulosic feedstock in a one-pot biphasic catalytic system. The catalytic reaction proceeds at elevated temperatures under hydrogen pressure in the presence of tungstosilicic acid, dissolved in the aqueous phase, and modified Ru/C, suspended in the organic phase. Tungstosilicic acid is primarily responsible for cellulose hydrolysis and dehydration steps, while the modified Ru/C selectively hydrogenates intermediates en route to the liquid alkanes. Under optimal conditions, microcrystalline cellulose is converted to 82% n-decane-soluble products, mainly n-hexane, within a few hours, with a minimum formation of gaseous and char products. The dominant route to the liquid alkanes proceeds via 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF), whereas the more common pathway via sorbitol appears to be less efficient. High liquid alkane yields were possible through (i) selective conversion of cellulose to glucose and further to HMF by gradually heating the reactor, (ii) a proper hydrothermal modification of commercial Ru/C to tune its chemoselectivity to furan hydrogenation rather than glucose hydrogenation, and (iii) the use of a biphasic reaction system with optimal partitioning of the intermediates and catalytic reactions. The catalytic system is capable of converting subsequent batches of fresh cellulose, enabling accumulation of the liquid alkanes in the organic phase during subsequent runs. Its robustness is illustrated in the conversion of the raw (soft)wood sawdust.
Chemsuschem | 2013
Beau Op de Beeck; Jan Geboers; Stijn Van de Vyver; Jonas Van Lishout; Jeroen Snelders; Wouter J. J. Huijgen; Christophe M. Courtin; Pierre A. Jacobs; Bert F. Sels
The catalytic valorization of cellulose is currently subject of intense research. Isosorbide is among the most interesting products that can be formed from cellulose as it is a potential platform molecule and can be used for the synthesis of a wide range of pharmaceuticals, chemicals, and polymers. A promising direct route from cellulose to isosorbide is presented in this work. The strategy relies on a one-pot bifunctional catalytic concept, combining heteropoly acids, viz. H(4)SiW(12)O(40), and redox catalysts, viz. commercial Ru on carbon, under H(2) pressure. Starting from pure microcrystalline cellulose, a rapid conversion was observed, resulting in over 50% isosorbide yield. The robustness of the developed system is evidenced by the conversion of a range of impure cellulose pulps obtained by organosolv fractionation, with isosorbide yields up to 63%. Results were compared with other (ligno)cellulose feedstocks, highlighting the importance of fractionation and purification to increase reactivity and convertibility of the cellulose feedstock.
Green Chemistry | 2016
Thijs Ennaert; Beau Op de Beeck; Jens Vanneste; Arjan T. Smit; Wouter J. J. Huijgen; Annick Vanhulsel; Pierre A. Jacobs; Bert F. Sels
Reductive hydrolysis of cellulose to hexitols is a promising technology to valorize cellulose streams. Several catalytic systems have been reported to successfully process commercially available purified cellulose powders according to this technology. Ruthenium-loaded USY zeolites in the presence of minute amounts of HCl previously showed very high hexitol yields. This contribution first investigates into more detail the impact of several cellulose accessibility-related properties like cellulose crystallinity, particle size and degree of polymerization on the conversion rate and hexitol selectivity. Therefore, a series of commercial cellulose samples and several mechano- and chemotreated ones were processed with the Ru/H-USY–HCl catalytic system under standard hot liquid water conditions. The results reveal that the polymerization degree has a large impact on both the conversion rate and selectivity, but its impact fades for DPs lower than 200. From then on, the dominant parameters are the particle size and crystallinity. A second part addresses the influence of cellulose purity. Therefore, organosolv pulps of three lignocellulosic substrates (wheat straw, spruce and birch wood), optionally followed by a bleaching procedure, were processed under the same catalytic circumstances. Here factors like residual lignin content and acid buffer capacity appeared crucial, pointing to the necessity of a dedicated delignification and purification procedure step in order to form the most reactive cellulose feedstock for hexitol production. Complete removal of non-glucosic components is not required since processing of ethanol organosolv birch cellulose and bleached ethanol organosolv wheat straw cellulose, both containing about 6 wt% of lignin and minor contents of ashes and proteins, showed a similar hexitol yield, viz. 34–39%, to that derived from pure microcrystalline cellulose.
Green Chemistry | 2014
Roselinde Ooms; Michiel Dusselier; Jan Geboers; Beau Op de Beeck; Rick Verhaeven; Elena Gobechiya; Johan A. Martens; Andreas Redl; Bert F. Sels
Chemsuschem | 2013
Beau Op de Beeck; Jan Geboers; Stijn Van de Vyver; Jonas Van Lishout; Jeroen Snelders; Wouter J. J. Huijgen; Christophe M. Courtin; Pierre A. Jacobs; Bert F. Sels
Archive | 2015
Beau Op de Beeck; Michiel Dusselier; Jan Geboers; Jensen Holsbeek; Eline Morré; Steffen Oswald; Lars Giebeler; Bert Sels
Abstracts of Papers of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Beau Op de Beeck; Michiel Dusselier; Jeroen Snelders; Christophe Courtin; Steffen Oswald; Lars Giebeler; Pierre Jacobs; Bert Sels
Abstracts of Papers of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Beau Op de Beeck; Michiel Dusselier; Jan Geboers; Jeroen Snelders; Steffen Oswald; Lars Giebeler; Christophe Courtin; Pierre Jacobs; Bert Sels
Archive | 2013
Beau Op de Beeck; Jan Geboers; Stijn Van de Vyver; Jonas Van Lishout; Jeroen Snelders; Wouter J. J. Huijgen; Christophe Courtin; Pierre Jacobs; Bert Sels
Chemsuschem | 2013
Beau Op de Beeck; Jan Geboers; Stijn Van de Vyver; Jonas Van Lishout; Jeroen Snelders; Wouter J. J. Huijgen; Christophe M. Courtin; Pierre A. Jacobs; Bert F. Sels