Biolign

Standing in a BioLign pilot plant, the air smells not of chemicals, but of wet cardboard and warm sawdust. Hoses carry black slurry into centrifuges. On a metal table sits a puck of solid BioLign—smooth, dark, and heavy. It looks like charcoal, but it feels like plastic.

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First, . Lignin from softwood (pine) is chemically different from hardwood (oak) or grass (wheat straw). BioLign processes must be tuned to the feedstock. A "one-size-fits-all" lignin does not exist. BioLign

The chemical industry consumes millions of tons of phenol (derived from benzene) to make adhesives (plywood, OSB), molded plastics, and epoxy resins. BioLign is structurally similar to phenol. With minor chemical tweaking (depolymerization), BioLign can replace up to 50% of the petroleum-based phenol in phenolic resins. The result? Plywood that binds forests to forests—a truly circular bioeconomy. The Carbon Negative Math The numbers are staggering. The pulp and paper industry generates roughly 70 million tons of lignin annually, most of which is incinerated. If just 10% of that were converted into BioLign-based carbon fiber for the automotive industry, it would offset nearly 15 million tons of CO2 equivalent per year. Standing in a BioLign pilot plant, the air

Carbon fiber is strong, light, and expensive—because it is made from polyacrylonitrile (PAN), a petroleum product that costs roughly $15-30 per kg. BioLign offers a cheaper, renewable precursor. Early trials show that lignin-based carbon fibers (spun through melt-blowing techniques) are 50-70% cheaper to produce. While they currently lack the ultimate tensile strength of PAN fibers for aerospace wings, they are perfect for automotive parts, wind turbine blades, and consumer electronics. A car built with BioLign carbon fiber stores carbon in its chassis rather than emitting it from a tailpipe. It looks like charcoal, but it feels like plastic