| Literature DB >> 29143790 |
Tengfei Li1, Gaojin Lyu2, Yu Liu3, Rui Lou4, Lucian A Lucia5,6, Guihua Yang7, Jiachuan Chen8, Haroon A M Saeed9,10.
Abstract
Deep eutectic solvents (DESs) are a potentially high-value lignin extraction methodology. DESs prepared from choline chloride (ChCl) and three hydrogen-bond donors (HBD)-lactic acid (Lac), glycerol, and urea-were evaluated for isolation of willow (Salix matsudana cv. Zhuliu) lignin. DESs types, mole ratio of ChCl to HBD, extraction temperature, and time on the fractionated DES-lignin yield demonstrated that the optimal DES-lignin yield (91.8 wt % based on the initial lignin in willow) with high purity of 94.5% can be reached at a ChCl-to-Lac molar ratio of 1:10, extraction temperature of 120 °C, and time of 12 h. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) , 13C-NMR, and 31P-NMR showed that willow lignin extracted by ChCl-Lac was mainly composed of syringyl and guaiacyl units. Serendipitously, a majority of the glucan in willow was preserved after ChCl-Lac treatment.Entities:
Keywords: DES-lignin; choline chloride; deep eutectic solvents; lactic acid
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29143790 PMCID: PMC5713236 DOI: 10.3390/ijms18112266
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Effect of deep eutectic solvents (DESs) type and temperature on the solid residue yield (a) and DES-lignin yield (b) (molar ratio of choline chloride (ChCl) to hydrogen-bond donors (HBD) was 1:2, and the treatment time was 6 h).
Figure 2Effect of different mole ratio of choline chloride (ChCl) to lactic acid (Lac), as well as Lac which was not formed DES with ChCl on the solid residue yield and DES-Lignin yield. The treatment conditions: temperature, 120 °C; time: 6 h.
Figure 3Solid residue yield and DES-Lignin yield varying with treatment time after ChCl-Lac (molar ratio 1:10) treatment at a treatment temperature of 120 °C.
Figure 4The composition of solid residue and dissolved carbohydrates in the mixtures after choline chloride-lactic acid (ChCl-Lac, molar ratio 1:10) treatment at 120 °C for 12 h (on dry basis of the initial sample).
The chemical composition of the solid residue and dissolved in the mixtures after choline chloride-lactic acid (ChCl-Lac) (1:10) treatment at 120 °C for 12 h (as a percentage of the initial component).
| Component | Arabinose (%) | Galactose (%) | Glucose (%) | Xylose (%) | Mannose (%) | Lignin (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Solid residue | - | - | 82.07 | 10.77 | - | 6.20 |
| Dissolved in the mixtures | 70.69 | 72.00 | 14.13 | 73.52 | 81.3 | 91.8 * |
* The amount of lignin extracted by deep eutectic solvents (DESs).
Purity analysis of the lignin extracted from willow by ChCl-Lac (1:10) treatment at 120 °C for 12 h.
| Component | Amount (%) |
|---|---|
| Acid insoluble lignin (AIL) | 92.57 ± 0.7 |
| Acid soluble lignin (ASL) | 1.89 ± 0.1 |
| Glucose | 0.21 ± 0.05 |
| Xylose | 0.15 ± 0.03 |
| Arabinose | - |
| Galactose | - |
| Mannose | - |
| Ash | 0.51 ± 0.1 |
| Lignin purity * | 94.46 ± 0.8 |
* Lignin purity is calculated from the sum up of AIL (%) and ASL (%) of willow.
Figure 5Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) spectra of the initial sample, solid residue, and DES-Lignin.
Assignment of Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR)spectra of the initial sample, solid residue, and DES-Lignin.
| Wavenumbers (cm−1) | Assignment (Bond) | DES-Lignin | Solid Residue | Initial Sample |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3410 | O–H stretching vibration | 3410 | 3410 | 3410 |
| 2924 | C–H stretching vibration in methyl, methylene | 2924 | 2924 | 2924 |
| 1710 | C=O stretching vibration | 1710 | 1710 | 1710 |
| 1600, 1510 | Aromatic ring skeleton vibration | 1600, 1510 | - | 1600, 1510 |
| 1460 | C–H deformation vibration in –CH2– | 1460 | 1460 | 1460 |
| 1426 | C–H bending vibration in –CH2– of cellulose | - | 1426 | 1426 |
| 1373 | C–H bending vibration of aliphatic compounds | - | 1373 | 1373 |
| 1325, 1220 | C–O stretching vibration of syringyl units | 1325, 1220 | 1325 | 1325, 1220 |
| 1270 | C–O stretching vibration of guaiacyl units | 1270 | - | 1270 |
| 1164 | C–O–C symmetrical stretching vibration in carbohydrate | - | 1164 | 1164 |
| 1120/835 | C–H stretching vibration of syringyl units | 1120/835 | - | 1120/835 |
| 1056 | C=O stretching vibration in carbohydrate | - | 1056 | 1056 |
| 1035 | C–H bending vibration of guaiacyl units | 1035 | 1035 | 1035 |
Figure 613C NMR spectra of DES-Lignin.
13C NMR analysis of DES-Lignin.
| Chemical Shift (ppm) | Assignment |
|---|---|
| 171–174 | Phenolic OH |
| 169–171 | Aliphatic OH |
| 150.3–153.0 | CAr in etherified syringyl units |
| 146.2–149.0 | CAr in non-etherified guaiacyl units |
| 131.0–132.1 | CAr in non-etherified syringyl units |
| 114.2–116.0 | CAr in |
| 103–108 | CAr in syringyl units |
| 67–71 | Cα in β-O-4 |
| 57–61 | Cγ in β-O-4 |
| 54–57 | CH3O |
| 52–54 | Cβ in β-β or β-5 |
31P NMR analysis of DES-Lignin.
| Chemical Shift (ppm) | Assignment | Content (mmol·g−1) |
|---|---|---|
| 133.8–135.0 | Carboxyl | 0.182 |
| 137.0–138.4 | p-phenol hydroxyl (H) | 0.110 |
| 138.4–140.2 | Guaiacyl phenol hydroxyl (G) | 0.285 |
| 142.4–143.7 | Syringyl phenol hydroxyl (S) | 0.520 |
| - | G:H:S | 2.59:1:4.73 |
| 140.2–142.4, 143.7–144.4 | Condensation phenol hydroxyl | 0.539 |
| 145.2–150.1 | Aliphatic hydroxyl | 0.606 |
| - | Total phenol hydroxyl | 0.915 |
| - | Total hydroxyl | 2.06 |
Composition analysis of willow.
| Composition | Willow (wt %) |
|---|---|
| Arabinose | 0.58 |
| Galactose | 0.75 |
| Glucose | 49.13 |
| Xylose | 17.74 |
| Mannose | 1.24 |
| Total lignin | 21.63 |
| Acid insoluble lignin | 18.63 |
| Acid soluble lignin | 3.00 |
| Benzene-alcohol extractive | 3.10 |
| Ash | 0.91 |
Figure 7Flow diagram of willow treatment with DESs.