Harton Shane E, Pingali Sai Venkatesh, Nunnery Grady A, Baker Darren A, Walker S Hunter, Muddiman David C, Koga Tadanori, Rials Timothy G, Urban Volker S, Langan Paul
Center for Renewable Carbon, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee, 37996, United States.
Department of Chemistry, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695, United States.
ACS Macro Lett. 2012 May 15;1(5):568-573. doi: 10.1021/mz300045e. Epub 2012 Apr 17.
Lignin, an abundant, naturally occurring biopolymer, is often considered "waste" and used as a simple fuel source in the paper-making process. However, lignin has emerged as a promising renewable resource for engineering materials, such as carbon fibers. Unfortunately, the molecular architecture of lignin (in vivo and extracted) is still elusive, with numerous conflicting reports in the literature, and knowledge of this structure is extremely important, not only for materials technologies, but also for production of biofuels such as cellulosic ethanol due to biomass recalcitrance. As such, the molecular structures of solvent-extracted (sulfur-free) lignins, which have been modified using various acyl chlorides, have been probed using small-angle X-ray (SAXS) and neutron (SANS) scattering in tetrahydrofuran (THF) solution along with hydrodynamic characterization using dilute solution viscometry and gel permeation chromatography (GPC) in THF. Mass spectrometry shows an absolute molecular weight ≈18-30 kDa (≈80-140 monomers), while GPC shows a relative molecular weight ∼3 kDa. A linear styrene oligomer (2.5 kDa) was also analyzed in THF using SANS. Results clearly show that lignin molecular architectures are somewhat rigid and complex, ranging from nanogels to hyperbranched macromolecules, not linear oligomers or physical assemblies of oligomers, which is consistent with previously proposed delignification (extraction) mechanisms. Future characterization using the methods discussed here can be used to guide extraction processes as well as genetic engineering technologies to convert lignin into value added materials with the potential for high positive impact on global sustainability.
木质素是一种丰富的天然生物聚合物,在造纸过程中常被视为“废料”并用作简单的燃料来源。然而,木质素已成为一种有前景的工程材料可再生资源,如碳纤维。不幸的是,木质素(体内和提取的)分子结构仍然难以捉摸,文献中有众多相互矛盾的报道,而了解这种结构极其重要,不仅对材料技术如此,对于生物燃料如纤维素乙醇的生产也很重要,因为生物质具有顽固性。因此,已使用各种酰氯对溶剂萃取(无硫)木质素进行了改性,通过在四氢呋喃(THF)溶液中使用小角X射线(SAXS)和中子(SANS)散射以及在THF中使用稀溶液粘度测定法和凝胶渗透色谱法(GPC)进行流体动力学表征,对其分子结构进行了探测。质谱显示绝对分子量约为18 - 30 kDa(约80 - 140个单体),而GPC显示相对分子量约为3 kDa。还在THF中使用SANS对线性苯乙烯低聚物(2.5 kDa)进行了分析。结果清楚地表明,木质素分子结构有些刚性且复杂,范围从纳米凝胶到超支化大分子,而非线性低聚物或低聚物的物理聚集体,这与先前提出的脱木质素(提取)机制一致。使用本文讨论的方法进行的未来表征可用于指导提取过程以及基因工程技术,将木质素转化为具有对全球可持续性产生高积极影响潜力的增值材料。