# Development and Application Prospects of Biomass-Based Organic Binders for Pellets Compared with Bentonite

**Authors:** Yu Liu, Wenguo Liu, Zile Peng, Jingsong Wang, Qingguo Xue, Haibin Zuo

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/ma18194553 · 2025-09-30

## TL;DR

This paper explores biomass-based organic binders as eco-friendly alternatives to bentonite in steel industry pellets to reduce carbon emissions.

## Contribution

The study systematically explains the mechanism of organic binders and proposes ways to optimize their structure for better high-temperature performance.

## Key findings

- Organic binders improve pellet quality by reducing impurities and increasing iron grade.
- Lignosulfonate, CMC, and CMS are effective organic binders derived from renewable biomass.
- Combining organic binders with LD sludge and nano-CaCO3 improves pellet strength and reduces emissions.

## Abstract

With the low-carbon transformation of the steel industry, using low-carbon raw materials is one of the important ways to achieve the “dual carbon” goals. Pellets have great physical and chemical properties as low-carbon furnace materials, which can significantly reduce blast furnace carbon emissions, exhibiting favorable overall environmental benefits. Increasing their proportion in the furnace is one of the important measures the steel industry can take to reduce carbon emissions. Binders play a critical role in the pelletizing process, and their properties directly influence pellet quality, thereby affecting the subsequent blast furnace smelting process. Compared with traditional bentonite, organic binders have become a potential alternative material due to their environmental friendliness, renewability, and ability to significantly reduce silica and alumina impurities in pellets while improving the iron grade. This work systematically elucidates the mechanism of organic binders, which primarily rely on the chemical adsorption of carboxyl groups and the hydrogen bonding of hydroxyl groups to enhance pellet strength, and then provides three typical examples of organic binders: lignosulfonate, carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC), and carboxymethyl starch (CMS). The common characteristic of these organic binders is that they are derived from renewable biomass through chemical modification, which is a derivative of biomass with renewable and abundant resources. However, the main problem with organic binders is that they burn and decompose at high temperatures. Current research has achieved technological breakthroughs in pellet quality by combining LD sludge, low-iron oxides, and nano-CaCO3, including improved iron grade, reduced reduction swelling index (RSI), and enhanced preheating/roasting strength. Future studies should focus on optimizing the molecular structure of organic binders by increasing the degree of substitution of functional groups and the overall degree of polymerization. This approach aims to replace traditional bentonite while exploring applications of composite industrial solid wastes, effectively addressing the high-temperature strength loss issues in organic binders and providing strong support for the steel industry to achieve the green and low-carbon goals.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** carboxymethyl cellulose (PubChem CID 24748)

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** silica (MESH:D012822), hydrogen (MESH:D006859), iron (MESH:D007501), alumina (MESH:D000537), CMC (MESH:D002266), CMS (MESH:C034848), iron oxides (MESH:C000499), carbon (MESH:D002244), Bentonite (MESH:D001546), CaCO3 (MESH:D002119), lignosulfonate (MESH:C001545)

## Figures

16 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12526317/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12526317