Begin of page section:
Page sections:

  • Go to contents (Accesskey 1)
  • Go to position marker (Accesskey 2)
  • Go to main navigation (Accesskey 3)
  • Go to sub navigation (Accesskey 4)
  • Go to additional information (Accesskey 5)
  • Go to page settings (user/language) (Accesskey 8)
  • Go to search (Accesskey 9)

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Begin of page section:
Page settings:

English en
Deutsch de
Search
Login

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Begin of page section:
Search:

Search for details about Uni Graz
Close

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections


Search

Begin of page section:
Main navigation:

Page navigation:

  • University

    University
    • About the University
    • Organisation
    • Faculties
    • Library
    • Working at University of Graz
    • Campus
    Developing solutions for the world of tomorrow - that is our mission. Our students and our researchers take on the great challenges of society and carry the knowledge out.
  • Research Profile

    Research Profile
    • Our Expertise
    • Research Questions
    • Research Portal
    • Promoting Research
    • Research Transfer
    • Ethics in Research
    Scientific excellence and the courage to break new ground. Research at the University of Graz creates the foundations for making the future worth living.
  • Studies

    Studies
    • Prospective Students
    • Students
    • Welcome Weeks for First Year Students
  • Community

    Community
    • International
    • Location
    • Research and Business
    • Alumni
    The University of Graz is a hub for international research and brings together scientists and business experts. Moreover, it fosters the exchange and cooperation in study and teaching.
  • Spotlight
Topics
  • StudiGPT is here! Try it out!
  • Sustainable University
  • Researchers answer
  • Work for us
Close menu

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Begin of page section:
You are here:

University of Graz Climate Change news Green chemistry
  • About us
  • Research fields
  • Study/Doctorate
  • Network
  • Open Calls

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Wednesday, 24 November 2021

Green chemistry

The chemist Katalin Barta and her team have developed a method to produce polymers with promising properties from lignin. They could represent a climate-friendly alternative to petroleum-based plastics. Photo: Artjazz – stock.adobe.com

The chemist Katalin Barta and her team have developed a method to produce polymers with promising properties from lignin. They could represent a climate-friendly alternative to petroleum-based plastics. Photo: Artjazz – stock.adobe.com

Researchers at the University of Graz develop bio-based polymers from paper industry waste

Every year, the paper industry produces around 50 million tonnes of lignin – a substance from the plant cell wall – as waste. Most of it is incinerated, some of it is used industrially, for example in the production of vanillin. As a renewable raw material, however, lignin still has a lot of potential that needs to be tapped. Katalin Barta, a chemist at the University of Graz, and her team have now developed an efficient catalytic method to produce polymers with promising properties from the waste product. These polymers could be suitable for a wide variety of high-tech materials, for example in the automotive industry, and represent a climate-friendly alternative to petroleum-based plastics. The research results were published in the journal Chem Catalysis.

"We succeeded in obtaining a special high-quality diamine from lignin mixtures, a nitrogen compound that plays an important role in industry," Katalin Barta reports. "We obtained this molecule via a series of catalytic processes and then used it to produce a promising class of polymers. Their properties suggest that they could serve as resistant plastics, with multiple applications, such as for car body parts," explains the chemist, whose research is funded by an ERC Starting Grant from the EU. The method is very efficient, ensures easy production and could eventually be applied on an industrial scale.

Publication
A Well-defined Diamine from Lignin Depolymerisation Mixtures for Constructing Bio-based Polybenzoxazines.
Xianyuan Wu, Maxim V. Galkin, Katalin Barta
Chem Catalysis, DOI 10.1016/j.checat.2021.10.022
www.cell.com/chem-catalysis/fulltext/S2667-1093(21)00287-6

 

Green chemistry
Katalin Barta's research focuses on sustainable methods, renewable raw materials and environmentally friendly reactions. This makes the chemist at the University of Graz part of the field of excellence "Climate Change Graz". Numerous publications attest to her successful work. A "green" method developed by her team for splitting wood into cellulose and lignin was published in the renowned journal Nature Communications in September 2021. Instead of organic solvents, which are CO2-intensive and toxic, the chemist uses reusable alternative solvents from renewable resources. In addition to the environmental aspect, the method is also characterised by the high quality of the end products cellulose and lignin obtained with it.

Publication
Tunable and functional deep eutectic solvents for lignocellulose valorization.
Yongzhuang Liu, Noemi Deak, Zhiwen Wang, Haipeng Yu, Lisanne Hameleers, Edita Jurak, Peter J. Deuss & Katalin Barta
Nature Communications volume 12, Article number: 5424 (2021)
www.nature.com/articles/s41467-021-25117-1

created by Gudrun Pichler

Related news

Human Rights, Security and National Adaptation Plans Nexus

A Holistic Approach to Women and Human Mobility on Monday, June 28th 16:00-17:30 online

Circular Bioengineering: FWF Cluster of Excellence aims to revolutionise the product cycle

Take a renewable raw material from nature – wood, for example – break it down into its building blocks and use them to create a functional material, such as a water-repellent surface coating, with the help of green chemistry. Once this has served its purpose, break it down again into its chemical components and use them to build something new. This idea is set to revolutionise the production and life cycle of materials and goods. The Cluster of Excellence "Circular Bioengineering", funded by the Austrian Science Fund FWF, is researching how to produce products from biomass, develop sustainable methods for the production process, and open options for returning products that have reached the end of their lifetime back into a cycle. The University of Graz is a partner in this Cluster of Excellence, for which the FWF is providing 18 million euros. Including its own funds, the total volume of the project is 27 million euros. The lead is with the BOKU University in Vienna.

Climate change update: ClimateTracer of the University of Graz provides reliable data

Yesterday, the Copernicus Climate Change Service of the European Union published its data on global warming up to end of November 2024. These confirm that this year will see the 1.5 °C threshold clearly exceeded for the first time. The Wegener Center at the University of Graz already computed an accurate full-year prediction: the global near-surface air temperature in 2024 will rise by 1.62 °C – plus/minus 0.05 °C standard deviation – compared to the pre-industrial level. Such latest predictions for 2024 and other essential data on climate change are provided by the scientists via the Graz Climate Change Indicators (GCCI) portal.

Novel Methods of Semiconductor Manufacturing: University of Graz is partner in EU project

How can technological innovations be aligned with principles of sustainability and circularity? This is a challenge being tackled by researchers at the Department of Environmental Systems Sciences at the University of Graz. As a partner in a new EU project, the team, led by Rupert Baumgartner, is contributing its expertise in sustainability assessment for the semiconductor manufacturing process. The focus of the research project “HaloFreeEtch” is on developing innovative, environmentally friendly etching methods for semiconductors.

Begin of page section:
Additional information:

University of Graz
Universitaetsplatz 3
8010 Graz
Austria
  • Contact
  • Web Editors
  • Moodle
  • UNIGRAZonline
  • Imprint
  • Data Protection Declaration
  • Accessibility Declaration
Weatherstation
Uni Graz

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Begin of page section:

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections