Health & Environmental Research Online (HERO)


Print Feedback Export to File
4364396 
Journal Article 
Advanced Model Compounds for Understanding Acid-Catalyzed Lignin Depolymerization: Identification of Renewable Aromatics and a Lignin-Derived Solvent 
Lahive, CW; Deuss, PJ; Lancefield, CS; Sun, Z; Cordes, DB; Young, CM; Tran, F; Slawin, AM; de Vries, JG; Kamer, PC; Westwood, NJ; Barta, K 
2016 
Yes 
Journal of the American Chemical Society
ISSN: 0002-7863
EISSN: 1520-5126 
138 
28 
8900-8911 
English 
The development of fundamentally new approaches for lignin depolymerization is challenged by the complexity of this aromatic biopolymer. While overly simplified model compounds often lack relevance to the chemistry of lignin, the direct use of lignin streams poses significant analytical challenges to methodology development. Ideally, new methods should be tested on model compounds that are complex enough to mirror the structural diversity in lignin but still of sufficiently low molecular weight to enable facile analysis. In this contribution, we present a new class of advanced (β-O-4)-(β-5) dilinkage models that are highly realistic representations of a lignin fragment. Together with selected β-O-4, β-5, and β-β structures, these compounds provide a detailed understanding of the reactivity of various types of lignin linkages in acid catalysis in conjunction with stabilization of reactive intermediates using ethylene glycol. The use of these new models has allowed for identification of novel reaction pathways and intermediates and led to the characterization of new dimeric products in subsequent lignin depolymerization studies. The excellent correlation between model and lignin experiments highlights the relevance of this new class of model compounds for broader use in catalysis studies. Only by understanding the reactivity of the linkages in lignin at this level of detail can fully optimized lignin depolymerization strategies be developed. 
• Formaldehyde [archived]
     HAWC
          Reproduction and development
               Excluded
     Search Update 2018-2021
          Reproductive and Developmental effects
               PubMed
• IRIS Formaldehyde (Inhalation) [Final 2024]
     Literature Indexing
          PubMed
          2021 Systematic Evidence Map
     Literature Identification
          Reproductive and Developmental Effects
               Excluded