Bulletin of Chemical Reaction Engineering & Catalysis
2026: Just Accepted Manuscript and Article In Press 2026

Textural Properties and Surface Chemistry of Rice Husk–Derived Biochar and Bio-silica Supports in Ni-Catalyzed Oleic Acid Deoxygenation

Mahene, Wilson Leonidas (Unknown)
Machunda, Revocatus Lazaro (Unknown)
Buckman, Tom A. (Unknown)
Salifu, Ali Azeko (Unknown)
Kivevele, Thomas (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
30 Oct 2026

Abstract

Rice husk (RH), an abundant agricultural residue, is a promising precursor for the production of carbon- and silica-based catalyst supports for upgrading lipid feedstocks. Previous studies have shown that RH-derived biochar and biosilica can serve as effective catalyst supports in reactions involving relatively small molecules; however, their application in the deoxygenation of lipid-derived molecules remains largely unexplored. In this study, RH was converted into three distinct supports, desilicated biochar (RH-C), KOH-activated desilicated biochar (RH-AC), and biosilica (RH-SiO₂), which were systematically compared as supports for Ni catalysts in the solvent-free deoxygenation of oleic acid. The supports and catalysts were characterized by BET, TEM, XRD, XPS, and TGA. Ni/RH-AC exhibited the highest surface area (809.8 m2 g-1) but lower mesopore volume than Ni-RH-C, while Ni/RH-SiO2 showed moderate surface area and minimal microporosity. XPS revealed minimal electronic perturbation of Ni supported on biochar, whereas biosilica induced electron withdrawal. All catalysts predominantly followed the decarboxylation/decarbonylation (deCOx) pathway, although Ni/RH-SiO2 also exhibited noticeable hydrodeoxygenation (HDO). Ni/RH-C achieved the highest conversion (96%), while Ni/RH-AC and Ni/RH-SiO2 achieved 76% and 72%, respectively. TGA/DSC analysis showed greater carbonaceous material deposition on Ni/RH-AC than on Ni/RH-C, with Ni/RH-SiO2 exhibiting the lowest coking. These findings reveal a clear structure-property-performance relationship, revealing that desilicated rice-husk biochar provides higher catalytic activity, whereas biosilica offers greater stability and lower susceptibility to coking. Moreover, excessive chemical activation after desilication appears unnecessary and may even be detrimental.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

bcrec

Publisher

Subject

Chemical Engineering, Chemistry & Bioengineering Chemistry

Description

Bulletin of Chemical Reaction Engineering & Catalysis, a reputable international journal, provides a forum for publishing the novel technologies related to the catalyst, catalysis, chemical reactor, kinetics, and chemical reaction engineering. Scientific articles dealing with the following topics in ...