Renewable Butyl Acrylate - BioBiz
Butyl acrylate is an essential monomer used in coatings, adhesives, sealants, and textile finishes. Conventionally derived from acrylic acid and butanol, both of which come from fossil sources, it contributes significantly to the carbon footprint of paints and polymers. Renewable butyl acrylate seeks to decouple this supply chain from petrochemicals by using bio-based acrylic acid and bio-butanol, without compromising on performance or compatibility.

How Renewable Butyl Acrylate is Produced

Key Pathways:

  1. Bio-acrylic acid + Bio-butanol (Esterification)
    • Bio-acrylic acid is produced via fermentation of glycerol, glucose, or 3-hydroxypropionic acid (3-HP).
    • Bio-butanol is generated via acetone–butanol–ethanol (ABE) fermentation using Clostridia or engineered yeast.
    • These are esterified under mild acidic conditions to produce butyl acrylate.
  2. Drop-in Route
    • Uses either one bio-based input (acrylic acid or butanol) while retaining the other as fossil-based — a near-term commercialization strategy.
  3. Emerging Fully Fermentative Route
    • R&D in direct microbial production of acrylate esters from sugars in engineered microbes is ongoing but still at lab scale.

Feedstocks: Corn or sugarcane (for glucose), lignocellulose (for 2G sugars), glycerol (biodiesel byproduct).

Case Study: Arkema – Bio-based Butyl Acrylate Using Bio-butanol

Highlights:

  • Arkema has commercialized renewable butyl acrylate using bio-butanol derived from fermentation, in partnership with fermentation tech providers.
  • Used in coatings, adhesives, and automotive paints under Sartomer® brand with high bio-based content.

Timeline & Outcome:

  • 2016–2018: Process scale-up and sourcing of bio-butanol initiated.
  • 2020: Launch of mass-balance certified bio-based butyl acrylate.
  • 2022–2024: Expanded product lines in Europe and North America with growing customer uptake.

Global Startups Working on Renewable Acrylates

  • Cargill + NatureWorks (USA) – Working on bio-based acrylic acid via lactic acid and 3-HP routes.
  • Nippon Shokubai (Japan) – Developed glycerol-to-acrylic acid process, tested for use in acrylate esters.
  • BASF & Quantafuel – Evaluating plastic waste-derived bio-acrylics through pyrolysis + chemical recycling.
  • LanzaTech (USA) – Converts CO₂/syngas to ethanol and longer-chain alcohols like butanol for acrylates.

India’s Position

India currently imports butyl acrylate and acrylic acid (~200 KTPA) for use in paints and textiles.

  • No domestic bio-based acrylate production yet, but:
    • Godavari Biorefineries and Praj Industries have fermentation capabilities for bio-butanol and glycerol.
    • ICT Mumbai and CSIR–NCL are conducting lab-scale research on bio-acrylic acid synthesis via glycerol dehydration and microbial routes.
  • India’s growing ethanol and biodiesel base provides indirect infrastructure for bio-acrylate building blocks.

Commercialization Outlook

Market & Demand

  • Global butyl acrylate market: ~$5.2 billion (2024), expected to reach ~$7 billion by 2030.
  • Applications:
    • Water-based coatings
    • Adhesives and sealants
    • Textile and paper finishes

Key Drivers

  • Demand from low-VOC (volatile organic compound) and green coatings.
  • Corporate procurement targets for bio-based packaging and surface coatings.
  • Alignment with mass balance certification systems (e.g., ISCC+).
  • Growing supply of bio-butanol from industrial fermentation.

Challenges to Address

  • High Price Gap: Bio-based acrylic acid and butanol are still 1.5–2× costlier than fossil versions.
  • Purity Standards: Coating and adhesive applications require strict monomer purity and reactivity.
  • Infrastructure Lock-in: Existing plants are optimized for fossil-based inputs.
  • Lack of Local Scale: No Indian bio-acrylate plant currently exists.

Progress Indicators

  • 2016: Arkema and Evonik begin R&D on bio-acrylate monomers.
  • 2020: Bio-butanol–based butyl acrylate launched at industrial scale (mass balance).
  • 2022–2024: Multiple coating and adhesive product lines include renewable content.
  • India: R&D on glycerol-to-acrylic acid at ICT Mumbai; fermentation of bio-butanol explored by Godavari.

TRL 8–9, with full commercial products in the market. Full bio-based acrylate (using bio-acrylic acid) is at TRL 5–7, with lab to pilot-scale developments ongoing.

Conclusion

Renewable butyl acrylate is an important milestone in sustainable coatings and adhesives, offering manufacturers a route to decarbonize products without changing performance. Companies like Arkema and Cargill have shown that drop-in or partially renewable options are already viable, and full bio-based solutions are progressing fast. For India, leveraging its glycerol, ethanol, and fermentation infrastructure could enable entry into this high-demand segment. As price gaps close and certifications strengthen, bio-acrylates will become a core enabler of circular chemistry in paints and polymers.


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