Formation and Reaction of Coniferyl Alcohol During Alkaline Pulping

Abstract
The formation and subsequent disappearance of coniferyl alcohol during kraft and soda-AQ (anthraquinone) pulping of western hemlock wood meal have been studied under isothermal condition. At 140°C, the amount of coniferyl alcohol generated increases to a sharp maximum (0.4% of total lignin in kraft and 1.9% in soda-AQ pulping) and then declines rapidly to low values. It was found that the disappearance of coniferyl alcohol was mainly due to condensation with other components of dissolved lignin. Nearly identical activation energies, 125 kJ mole−1 for kraft and 128 kJ mole−1 for soda-AQ pulping, were derived from the initial rates of coniferyl alcohol formation, conforming closely with the value 121 kJ mole−1 for the cleavage of phenolic β-ether model compounds in the kraft process.