About this Research Topic
Beyond these applications, glycerol can also be used as a raw material for a wide range of chemicals. Glycerol is a highly functionalized molecule with specific physico-chemical properties, which can be used in different reactions as a reactant or a building block. For example, glycerol can be used as a starting material for antibiotic production, biosurfactants, organic acid production (lactic, propionic, succinic, citric acid, glyoxylic acid, glyoxalic acid, amino acids, etc.), alcohols (propanediols), glycerol esters, acrolein production, etc. These products can be obtained either through chemical reactions such as acetalization, dehydration, glycerolysis, esterification, etherification, aqueous phase reforming, oxidation, carboxylation, electrochemical routes, or through enzymatic reactions. However, it must be kept in mind that the development of industrial processes relies on the use of crude glycerol from biodiesel production. For that purpose, robust processes involving impurities-insensitive catalysts or pre-purification have to be developed. Finally, the separation of the chemical products obtained after glycerol conversion is also a key step toward the development of viable glycerol-based processes.
This Research Topic calls for pioneering research highlighting the latest advances in the development of chemical, electrochemical, and biochemical innovative routes to transform glycerol into additional chemical compounds.
Potential topics include but are not limited to the following:
• Biotechnological routes
• Electrochemical systems applied to glycerol for electro-conversion into fine chemicals
• Original catalysis pathways including homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis
• Activation techniques applied to glycerol transformation
• Separation techniques applied to glycerol-derived products
• Original chemical process development using raw glycerol as starting material
Keywords: glycerol, value added products, catalysis, biocatalysis, electrosynthesis, activation
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.