Mingzhu
Yao
a,
Baojie
Liu
a,
Lina
Qin
a,
Zicheng
Du
a,
Zenglin
Wang
a,
Chengrong
Qin
a,
Chen
Liang
a,
Caoxing
Huang
b and
Shuangquan
Yao
*a
aGuangxi Key Laboratory of Clean Pulp & Papermaking and Pollution Control, School of Light Industrial and Food Engineering, Guangxi University, Nanning, 530004, PR China. E-mail: yaoshuangquan@gxu.edu.cn
bJiangsu Co-Innovation Center of Efficient Processing and Utilization of Forest Resources, Nanjing Forestry University, Nanjing, 210037, PR China
First published on 29th February 2024
Deep eutectic solvents (DESs) are widely used as recyclable green solvents for the separation of lignin from lignocellulosic biomass. However, the poor permeability of DES solution limits the green advancement of separation systems. In addition, lignin fragment molecules are susceptible to repolymerization reactions during separation, resulting in reduced lignin reactivity. In this study, a DES consisting of choline chloride (ChCl) as a hydrogen acceptor, 5-sulfosalicylic acid (5Saa) as a hydrogen donor, and a certain amount of γ-valerolactone (GVL) as an additive was designed. The system not only efficiently fractionated lignin from poplar (71.35%), but also selectively retained almost complete cellulose (retention 92.87%) under the optimal fractionation (ChCl/5Saa/GVL molar ratio 1/4/15, temperature 120 °C, time 3.0 h). Pre-crushing processing of raw materials was avoided as the new DES solution has stronger permeability compared to the previous DES solution. Selective deconstruction of lignocellulose was achieved due to a strong hydrogen network structure. The lignin fragments were effectively dissolved. The results showed that the stability of the carbo-positive active intermediates was enhanced by ChCl–5Saa/GVL. Lignin with a low molecular weight (2305 g mol−1), high purity (98.77%) and high total phenolic hydroxyl content (6.92 mmol g−1) was obtained. Homogeneous lignin nanoparticles (LNPs) were prepared with an average particle size of 23 nm. LNPs had high dispersion stability and excellent UV shielding properties. The green advancement of the new DES has been significantly improved and the efficient fractionation of high-value lignin was realized.
Currently, acidic DES systems have an excellent lignin separation ability. Generally, such a system is composed of choline chloride (ChCl) as the HBA and an organic acid as the HBD. Hong et al.19 utilized choline chloride–lactic acid (ChCl–LA) and choline chloride–oxalic acid (ChCl–OA) systems for the separation of poplar. The separation efficiency of lignin was 44–75%. It was shown that the HBD was the key to break the ether bond connection between the phenylpropane units. This was attributed to the fact that the number of oxygen atoms of the HBD significantly affects the strength of the DES hydrogen bonding network and its hydrogen bonding interaction with lignin. This implies that modulation of the HBD is one of the effective means to enhance the separation efficiency of lignin. Tan et al.20 comparatively analyzed the separation efficiency of DESs with different HBD compositions for lignin. It was found that HBDs containing carboxyl and hydroxyl structures were more effective for lignin separation. However, HBDs with a single functional structure were employed in previous studies. In particular, commonly used carboxylic acid- and polyol-based DESs contain only the COOH or OH group. This is responsible for the weak permeability nature of conventional DESs to efficiently break down cell walls. In fact, the pulverization pretreatment of the feedstock (20–80 mesh wood flour) was used as an adjunct to the DES separation technology. Obviously, the green and efficient separation value of DES treatment was reduced. Therefore, the choice of the HBD has a significant impact on the lignin separation efficiency. Fortunately, 5-sulfosalicylic acid (5Saa) is a green, mild organic acid rich in carboxyl and hydroxyl groups. It has a high pKa value with an excellent osmotic effect.21 New strong hydrogen bonds will be formed along with the reaction of the phenyl-containing DES with lignin.22 The complex network of hydrogen bonds in lignocellulosic biomass will be efficiently disrupted utilizing strong hydrogen bonding. This means that the separation efficiency of lignin will be enhanced. In addition, crushing pretreatment of the raw material will be avoided due to the new DES permeability enhancement. The green advancement of DESs has been effectively enhanced. This not only simplifies the separation process, but also reduces the energy consumption for separation. Furthermore, the regulation of the lignin molecular structure has been neglected during DES separation.15 Lignin side-chain carbo-positive active intermediates could attack the electron-rich aromatic ring of lignin during the separation process.5 The stabilized carbon–carbon bonds between lignin molecules were formed, limiting the processability and availability of lignin.23 Therefore, the regulation of the lignin molecular structure is an important measure for its efficient separation and high value utilization of lignin in DES separation. Recently, the stabilizing effect of γ-valerolactone (GVL), a sugar-derived derivative and polar nonprotonic solvent, has been discovered on carbo-positive active intermediates.24,25 Recombination of acid protons with their counterions will be facilitated. Furthermore, the lignin molecular structure could be efficiently regulated.25 The decrease in the accessibility of the reactive cellulose surface is prevented. This suggests that the construction of a novel dual-effect DES system with both efficient lignin fractionation and lignin molecular structure modulation is a new strategy to achieve high-value utilization of lignin. This means that greener, more energy-efficient and more advanced DES processing will be realized.
In this study, a ternary DES system with a stable hydrogen-bonded macromolecular network structure was designed. It consisted of choline chloride ChCl, 5Saa, and GVL. The physicochemical properties and hydrogen bonding network structure of the functional novel DES system were investigated. Its selective separation of poplar lignin was analyzed. Molecular structural features and surface chemical properties of regenerated lignin were analyzed. In addition, the separation mechanism of lignin by the novel DES was investigated. Meanwhile, highly active lignin nanoparticles (LNPs) were prepared. It is promising for a wide range of applications in the field of functional materials. The results of the study will contribute to the efficient fractionation and high-quality conversion of lignin.
The structure of the intermolecular hydrogen-bonded network affects the spatial arrangement of the molecules and charge delocalization.29 The physicochemical properties (melting point, density, conductivity, and viscosity) of the DES are strongly influenced by hydrogen bonding. The melting point of ChCl–5Saa was 80 °C. But the melting point of ChCl–5Saa/GVL was 65 °C. This was attributed to the hydrogen bonding interaction formed between the new DES leading to charge delocalization, which brings about a significant reduction in the melting point.30 As shown in Fig. 1e, the densities of ChCl–Lac, ChCl–5Saa, and ChCl–5Saa/GVL at 1.04 g cm−3, 1.34 g cm−3, and 1.23 g cm−3, respectively, were similar. ChCl–5Saa's conductivity at 1.09 mS cm−1 was lower than that of ChCl–Lac. This is attributed to the presence of fewer free ions in the surface solution system. The hydrogen-bonding interaction forces of Ch+–5Saa (anionic hydrogen bonding) and Cl−–5Saa (cationic-ionic hydrogen bonding) were formed because of the interaction of the choline cation (Ch+) in ChCl with the hydroxyl, carboxyl, and sulfonic groups of 5Saa. This led to a reduction in the number of free ions. In addition, the conductivity of ChCl–5Saa/GVL is as low as 0.53 mS cm−1. This is half that of ChCl–5Saa. This was because the hydrogen bonding structure of the ChCl–5Saa system changed with the addition of GVL. As a nonprotonic solvent, GVL interfered with the stabilization of the acid site. Recombination of the acid proton with its counterion was prompted. This phenomenon is similar to the linear bead structure of water molecules entering the DES system to form “hydrated chlorides”.31 This implied the formation of a stable strong hydrogen bonding network structure in ChCl–5Saa/GVL (Fig. 1g).
The ChCl–5Saa system is extremely unstable at ambient temperatures. Viscosity experiments were conducted at 65 °C to ensure uniformity of experimental conditions. The results showed that the viscosity of the DES system was not very high. The viscosities of ChCl–Lac, ChCl–5Saa, and ChCl–5Saa/GVL were 0.66 Pa s, 0.94 Pa s, and 0.84 Pa s, respectively (Fig. 1c). ChCl–Lac and ChCl–5Saa/GVL are Newtonian fluids. The shear rate had no effect on the solution's viscosity. However, ChCl–5Saa exhibits shear thinning, which indicates that it is a non-Newtonian fluid. The viscosity gradually tended to be constant when the shear rate exceeded 20 s−1. Therefore, the effect of temperature on the viscosity of the DES system was studied at a shear rate of 30 s−1. Fig. 1d shows that the viscosities of ChCl–Lac at different molar ratios (1
:
1, 1
:
4, and 1
:
10) gradually decreased with increasing temperature. In particular, the viscosity remained stable after the temperature exceeded 60 °C. This indicates that the ChCl–Lac system, in which Lac forms hydrogen bonds with Cl−, is stable and shows homogeneous liquid properties.32 However, ChCl–5Saa (1
:
4) and ChCl–5Saa/GVL (1
:
4
:
3) exhibited increased viscosity during shearing in the ranges of 70–85 °C and 35–45 °C, respectively. This is attributed to the instability of both solvent systems at ambient temperature. A freezing point was observed during the shear process, and some crystals precipitated. The crystals rapidly dissolved when the temperature exceeded the melting point of the mixture. This led to a decrease in the viscosity, which remained smooth. However, ChCl–5Saa/GVL (1
:
4
:
5) and ChCl–Lac (1
:
4
:
10) did not appear to have a freezing point, and both ratios had similar viscosity patterns. This suggests that stable ChCl–5Saa/GVL solvent systems could be prepared by modulating the molar ratio. In addition, the chemical properties of the different DES systems were quantified using the K–T parameters. Fig. 1f shows that the acidity (α) value, alkalinity (β) value, and polarizability (π*) of ChCl–5Saa/GVL were similar to those of ChCl–Lac. These values are 2.72, 1.76, and 0.94, respectively. This indicates that the hydrogen bond donor capacity, hydrogen bond acceptor capacity, and polarization rate of the ChCl–5Saa/GVL system are similar to those of ChCl–Lac.33 However, α, β, and π* values of ChCl–5Saa were 1.45, 1.38, and 2.15, respectively. This is attributed to the fact that the hydrogen-bonding ability of the ChCl–5Saa system to release and accept H was enhanced by the addition of GVL. This contributes to the formation of a more uniform and stable hydrogen-bonding network structure in the ChCl–5Saa/GV system. Therefore, the ChCl–5Saa/GVL system exhibited strong stability and a hydrogen-bonding network structure. This implies that the catalytic reaction rate and solvent penetration properties were enhanced in lignocellulosic biomass separation.
:
4
:
0, 1
:
4
:
3, 1
:
4
:
10, 1
:
4
:
15, 1
:
4
:
20, and 1
:
4
:
25. Fig. 2a shows that the lignin removal efficiency was 28.95% at a ratio of 1
:
4
:
0. It increased to 53.16% at a ratio of 1
:
4
:
15. The results clearly show that the lignin removal efficiency increased with an increase in GVL percentage. Importantly, the cellulose removal was negligible. This is attributed to the solubilizing effect of the ChCl–5Saa/GVL solvent system on lignin. ChCl acted as a hydrogen bonding acceptor. Since the hydroxyl, carboxyl and sulfonic acid groups in 5Saa provide H ions, it formed a strong hydrogen bonding network structure with ChCl.35 Thus, the polarity and permeability of the solvent increased. This led to stronger interactions between the DES and the free/etherified hydroxyl groups in lignin.20 Proton-catalyzed cleavage of ether bonds in lignocellulose and ester bonds in lignin–polysaccharide compounds was promoted. The cell wall of lignocellulosic biomass was easily cleaved. And when acidic protons were active in the catalyst, CVL accelerated the rate of the catalytic reaction.36 Hydrogen bonding between the HBA (ChCl) and the HBD (5Saa) in the original binary system was enhanced with the increase in the GVL molar ratio. The change in the solvent properties of the new ternary solvent system facilitated the breaking of strong hydrogen bonds in lignin and the binding of the aromatic nucleus to the aliphatic chain region, leading to a much higher solubility of lignin.37 However, the lignin removal efficiency decreased to 46.32% with an increase in the GVL percentage. The cellulose retention decreased from 99.33% to 95.85% when the ratio increased from 1
:
4
:
0 to 1
:
4
:
15. This is attributed to the introduction of excess third-party solvents, where the hydrogen bonding effect was changed.31 The solvation effect was transformed into a catalytic effect. The ionized H ions in 5Saa attacked the cellulose fraction of lignocellulose. This led to a decrease in lignin solubilization and enhanced cellulose solubilization. Therefore, the optimal ChCl
:
5Saa
:
GVL ratio for ChCl–5Saa/GVL treatment was 1
:
4
:
15.
Temperature has a crucial influence on the mass transfer effect of H protons. Xue et al.37 showed that temperature has a significant effect on the solubility of lignin in various solvents. Therefore, the effect of reaction temperature on lignin removal efficiency was studied at 100 °C, 110 °C, 120 °C, 130 °C, and 140 °C for 2.0 h. The ChCl
:
5Saa
:
GVL ratio was 1
:
4
:
15. Fig. 2b shows that the efficiency of lignin removal increased with increasing temperature. It increased from 44.24% to 84.39% when the reaction temperature was increased from 100 °C to 140 °C. At 120 °C, the lignin removal efficiency, cellulose retention, and solid recovery were 67.23%, 95.82%, and 51.25%, respectively. This indicates that effective lignin disassembly and solubilization were achieved while the integrity of the cellulose bundles was enhanced when the ChCl–5Saa/GVL solvent system was used at 120 °C. However, at 130 °C, the cellulose retention decreased significantly to 78.93% and the solid recovery decreased to 25.34%. This is attributed to the rapid cleavage of hydrogen, ether, and glycosidic bonds in the biomass cell walls under the intense reaction conditions.15 Lignin, hemicellulose, and cellulose were rapidly removed as the reaction temperature increased. Some lignin groups were modified at high temperatures. The chemical reactions of the more active reactive groups were promoted, such as hydroxyl (–OH) and methoxy (–OMe). Therefore, the optimum reaction temperature for ChCl–5Saa/GVL treatment was 120 °C.
Reaction time is an important factor influencing biomass deconstruction. Wang et al.38 showed that a longer reaction time enhanced the dissociation of plant cell walls, allowing the dissociation of lignin macromolecules into small molecular fragments. Therefore, the effect of ChCl–5Saa/GVL treatment on lignin removal and removal efficiency at different reaction times (1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 h) was investigated. The ratio of ChCl
:
5Saa
:
GVL was 1
:
4
:
15, and the reaction temperature was 120 °C. Fig. 2c shows that the lignin removal efficiency increased from 28.63% to 78.99% after 5 h. The lignin and cellulose removal efficiencies were 71.35% and 7.13%, respectively, at 3 h. This indicates that a suitable reaction time not only improves lignin dissolution but also protects the cellulose from excessive destruction. However, the cellulose retention decreased significantly (70.61%) when the reaction time exceeded 3 h. The lignin removal efficiency reached a maximum at 5 h. However, although the lignin removal efficiency was as high as 78.99%, the solid recovery was as low as 22.58%. This indicates that efficient fractionation of lignin and efficient utilization of the remaining lignocellulose fraction cannot be achieved by longer treatment times. Therefore, the optimal reaction time for ChCl–5Saa/GVL treatment was 3.0 h.
In summary, the optimal reaction conditions for the ChCl–5Saa/GVL treatment were as follows: a ChCl
:
5Saa
:
GVL ratio of 1
:
4
:
15, temperature of 120 °C, and reaction time of 3.0 h. The separation efficiencies of lignin, hemicellulose, and cellulose were 71.35%, 95.86%, and 7.13% (92.87% cellulose retention), respectively. Lignin was precipitated by the excess water, and hemicellulose, consisting mainly of xylose (52.6% content), was dissolved in the hydrolysate. At the same time, small amounts of formic acid, acetic acid, furfural and 5-hydroxymethylfurfural were also present in the hydrolyzed solution. Many studies have shown that the ChCl–Lac system has a better effect on the separation of poplar lignin.26 Therefore, the fractionation effects of the ChCl–5Saa/GVL and ChCl–Lac solvent systems on lignin were compared. Using the ChCl–Lac treatment, the lignin separation efficiency decreased by 6.18% (64.95%), as shown in Fig. 2d. In addition, cellulose structure breakage increased. The cellulose separation efficiency was twice as high (13.51%) under ChCl–Lac treatment. Thus, the fractionation efficiency of lignin was improved by ChCl–5Saa/GVL. In addition, the recycling performance of ChCl–5Saa/GVL was analyzed. The lignin separation was still as high as 68.85% and cellulose retention was 94.02% after 5 cycles (Table S2†). It was still higher than the separation effect of conventional DESs.20 Therefore, ChCl–5Saa/GVL has excellent recyclability for efficient selective separation of lignin.
Furthermore, this work was compared with the previously reported separation efficiency of the green advanced DES system for lignin (Fig. S1 and Table S1†). First, the sizes of the raw materials were small, concentrated in 0.18–0.85 mm in the previous DES pretreatments.19,39,40 In contrast, the wood strips (1.5 × 1.5 × 5 cm) were used directly for the fractionation of lignin in this work. The means that the permeability of ChCl–5Saa/GVL was greatly improved, the separation process was simplified, and the separation energy consumption was reduced compared to previous studies. In addition, the reaction time required to achieve the optimal separation efficiency of lignin was up to 8 h in previous studies. However, it was as low as 3 h at the same temperature with ChCl–5Saa/GVL pretreatment. In particular, the separation efficiency of lignin was 10–30% higher.41,42 This suggested that the separation efficiency of lignin was substantially improved. Last but not least, only about 7% of the cellulose was removed. This suggested that the high-value utilization of lignin and cellulose fractions had improved.
The cell walls of lignocellulose grew from the outside to the inside, and hemicellulose and lignin acted as adhesives and fillers to tightly bind the intercellular layer and the primary and secondary walls, bonding the adjacent microfiber bundles together (Fig. 3a). The effect of DES on the chemical structure of poplar fibers was analyzed. As shown in Fig. 4a, at 1657 cm−1, the stretching vibration peaks attributed to the carbonyl C
O of the aromatic ring disappeared after treatment. The peaks at 1600 cm−1, 1507 cm−1 and 1425 cm−1 were attributed to the stretching vibrations of the aromatic ring backbone. The intensities of these absorption peaks significantly weakened after the DES treatment. At 1328 cm−1, the absorption peak attributed to the lilac nucleus disappeared. At 1265 cm−1, the methoxy absorption peak attributed to guaiacol disappeared. The results indicate that the DES treatment had a good decomposition effect on lignin. In addition, at 1158 cm−1, the intensity of the C–O–C stretching vibration peak of the furan ring decreased after the treatment. At 1050 cm−1, the intensity of the stretching vibration absorption peak of the hemicellulose carbonyl C–O decreased. In particular, at 890 cm−1, the C–H bending vibration absorption peak of –D-xylose disappeared after ChCl–5Saa/GVL treatment. This shows that lignin removal was accompanied by hemicellulose decomposition. A significant increase in the relative cellulose content was observed in the residual solid samples with the deconstruction of hemicellulose and lignin. The fiber crystallinity index increased from 58.10% to 70.29% after ChCl–5Saa/GVL treatment (Fig. 4b). This increased the crystallinity index by 3.0% over that of the ChCl–Lac-treated samples. The results showed that ChCl–5Saa/GVL treatment had a significant effect on the deconstruction of lignin and hemicellulose, and residual solids containing higher cellulose content were obtained.
The changes in the thermal stability of the poplar wood samples before and after the DES treatment are shown in Fig. 4c and d. First, the initial pyrolysis temperature of the samples increased from 263 °C to 298 °C and 329 °C after DES treatment. The DTG curves show decomposition temperatures of 301 °C and 334 °C at the maximum thermal degradation rate (Fig. 4d). These peaks are attributed to the thermal degradation of hemicellulose and thermal degradation peak of cellulose, respectively. Due to the wide temperature range of thermal degradation of lignin (250–500 °C), no significant peak was observed at the maximum thermal degradation rate of lignin. The residual solids after the ChCl–5Saa/GVL treatment reached the maximum thermal degradation rate at 355 °C, which is higher by 31 °C than that after ChCl–Lac treatment (324 °C). Therefore, the ChCl–5Saa/GVL treatment preserved the high-purity cellulose component while separating lignin.
The structural characteristics of the chemical fraction of the residual poplar solids were investigated before and after treatment with the DES system.43 Therefore, Fig. 4e shows the peaks at 172 and 20 ppm of carbon atoms attributed to the acetylated C
O and –CH3 groups of hemicellulose, respectively. The peaks at 153 ppm, 147 ppm, and 55 ppm were attributed to the carbon atoms of the etherified lilac unit (S), guaiacyl unit (G), and –OMe of lignin, respectively. The peaks at 89, 83, 65, and 62 ppm are attributed to the carbon atoms of celluloses C4 and C6, respectively. The attribution peaks of lignin were significantly attenuated after DES treatment. In addition, the hemicellulose carbon atom attribution peaks of ChCl–5Saa/GVL completely disappeared, unlike those of ChCl–Lac. Significant double peaks were observed at 62 ppm and 65 ppm. These were attributed to the increased relative content of the crystalline cellulose region. The results show that the ChCl–5Saa/GVL system deconstructs lignin to obtain a high-purity cellulose fraction, which is very effective in the deconstruction of the three major components of poplar wood.
The lignin depolymerization and repolymerization reactions were found to occur simultaneously during the lignin solubilization process.44 Therefore, the surface elemental content of the samples was analyzed.45 As shown in Fig. 4f and g, the ChCl–Lac system isolated a large amount of lignin, and the C1 (–C–C) content of ChCl–Lac increased from 42.22% to 38.61% compared to RUW. However, the lignin surface coverage of ChCl–Lac increased from 0.78 to 0.82. This indicates that a new –C–C structure was produced, which resulted in lignin being deposited on the cellulose surface during lignin deconstruction using ChCl–Lac. This observation is consistent with SEM observations (Fig. 3). In addition, C1 of ChCl–5Saa/GVL was as low as 39.59% (Fig. 4h). The relative contents of the surface elements of the lignin and aromatic extracts decreased by 2.63%; C4 increased to 6.16%; and the O/C ratio increased to 0.48. The coverage of the surface lignin was reduced by 0.08 (0.7). These results suggest that the formation of –C–C-linked bonds was hindered during ChCl–5Saa/GVL deconstruction and lignin solubilization.46 This conclusion was also verified by the fractionation of elemental oxygen (Fig. 4i–k). Therefore, high cellulose surface accessibility was achieved after the ChCl–5Saa/GVL system treatment.
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| Fig. 5 2D-HSQC of regenerated lignin treated with different DES systems ((a and d) alkali lignin; (b and e) ChCl–Lac–Lignin; (c and f) ChCl–5Saa/GVL–Lignin). | ||
| M n (g mol−1) | M w (g mol−1) | M w/Mn | Separation efficiency (%) | Extraction yield (%) | Purity (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M n: the number average molecular weight; Mw: the heavy average molecular weight; Mw/Mn: polydispersity. | ||||||
| CEL | 3072 | 4822 | 1.57 | — | — | — |
| Alkali lignin | 2582 | 3656 | 2.32 | — | — | — |
| ChCl–Lac | 2181 | 4648 | 2.13 | 64.93 | 63.46 | 94.85 |
| ChCl–5Saa/GVL | 2305 | 4162 | 1.80 | 71.35 | 70.35 | 98.77 |
The β-O-4 aryl ether bond (A), β-β (B), and β-5 (C) were the major linkage bonds and substructures in the side chain region of poplar lignin. The aromatic region was dominated by syringyl (S) and a small amount of guaiacyl (G). The substructures of δC/δH 71.10/3.82 (Bγ), δC/δH 71.10/4.20 (Bγ), a small amount of δC/δH 111.59/6.99 (G2), and a large amount of δC/δH 131.99/7.71 (PB) were retained in ChCl–5Saa/GVL–Lignin as compared to the ChCl–Lac–Lignin structure. This is very similar to the original lignin structure. In addition, ChCl–5Saa/GVL–Lignin contained 26% G-units. This is three times the number of G-units in ChCl–Lac–Lignin. The S/G ratios of ChCl–Lac–Lignin and ChCl–5Saa/GVL–Lignin were 9.95 and 2.87, respectively (Table 2). This is attributed to the aggregation of GVL around the lignin fragment molecules and the formation of a protective ring. The G-units of ChCl–5Saa/GVL–Lignin were well-reserved during fractionation. The G-units have a stronger reactivity than the S-units. Therefore, lignin isolated by ChCl–5Saa/GVL has more reactive groups.
| S (%) | G (%) | S/G | β-O-4 (%) | β-β (%) | β-5 (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CEL | 56 | 44 | 1.27 | 61 | 9 | 4 |
| ChCl–Lac | 79 | 21 | 3.85 | — | — | — |
| ChCl–5Saa/GVL | 84 | 16 | 5.35 | — | — | — |
| ChCl–Lac–Lignin | 91 | 9 | 9.95 | — | — | — |
| ChCl–5Saa/GVL–Lignin | 74 | 26 | 2.87 | — | — | — |
ChCl–Lac–Lignin and ChCl–5Saa/GVL–Lignin were analyzed by 31P NMR. The phenolic hydroxyl contents of the different regenerated lignin were compared as shown in Table 3 (Fig. S2†). The higher the phenolic hydroxyl content, the more chemically reactive the lignin.27Table 3 shows that the total phenolic hydroxyl content in ChCl–5Saa/GVL–Lignin was as high as 6.92 mmol g−1. This is attributed to the increase in hydroxyl content caused by the breakage of β-O-4 aryl ether bonds and other depolymerization reactions.19 In addition, ChCl–5Saa/GVL–Lignin contained more aliphatic OH groups and guaiacyl OH groups than ChCl–Lac–Lignin, which were 2.67 mmol g−1 and 2.03 mmol g−1, respectively. This suggests that the fractionated lignin from the ChCl–5Saa/GVL system is a polyphenolic lignin that retains more G-units with high reactivity. Therefore, the ChCl–5Saa/GVL solvent system was able to extract lignin with high yield, high purity, and a large number of active sites.
| CEL | Alkali lignin | ChCl–Lac | ChCl–5Saa/GVL | ChCl–Lac–Lignin | ChCl–5Saa/GVL–Lignin | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aliphatic OH | 6.17 | 1.93 | 0.62 | 3.14 | 1.26 | 2.67 |
| Carboxylic acid OH | 0.15 | 0.97 | 0.29 | 0.30 | 0.32 | 0.37 |
| Syringyl OH | 0.23 | 1.49 | 2.87 | 3.79 | 2.17 | 4.18 |
| Guaiacyl OH | 0.86 | 0.73 | 1.17 | 1.78 | 1.37 | 2.03 |
| p-Hydroxyphenyl OH | 1.05 | 0.74 | 0.21 | 0.66 | 0.27 | 0.71 |
| Phenolic OH | 2.14 | 2.96 | 4.25 | 6.22 | 4.35 | 6.92 |
The residual lignin structure was similar to that of the CEL structure after ChCl–5Saa/GVL treatment. The δC/δH 62.97/3.74 (Cγ) and δC/δH 71.10/4.20 (Bγ) substructures were retained. The total phenolic hydroxyl content increased to 6.22 mmol g−1 (Table 2). This was three times higher than that of CEL and is attributed to the cleavage of β-O-4 after treatment with the DES solution. The δC/δH 60.64/3.60 signal at δC/δH 60.64/3.60 corresponded to the γ position (Aγ) of the side chain of the β-O-4 chain. This implies that an acylation reaction occurred between the –OH group in the lignin substructure and the –COOH in 5Saa.15 This result is consistent with the findings of previous studies.19 In addition, the signals δC/δH 72.39/4.88 for the α-position (Aα) and δC/δH 84.1/4.4 and δC/δH 86.5/4.07 for the β-position (Aβ) attributed to the side chains of the β-O-4 chain were not detected. This suggests that α and β sites of the A structure were selectively cut off during β-O-4 cleavage. The attribution signals δC/δH 84.98/4.75 for the α-position Bα, δC/δH 87.45/5.49 for the α-position Cα, and δC/δH 53.20/3.56 for the β-position Cβ of the β-β chain side chain were not detected. In particular, an unknown structure was found in the aromatic region δC/δH 106.14/6.61, but small amounts of G2 and G6 unit structures were also present. This is attributed to the fact that any new aromatic linkage results in H deficiency at the 2 and 6 positions. However, GVL had timely and effectively solubilized lignin in the ChCl–5Saa/GVL system. Further hydrolysis of lignin molecules in the residual solids was prevented. This was the main reason for the presence of small amounts of unhydrolyzed G2 and G6 unit structures.
The lignin in the residual solid of the ChCl–5Saa/GVL system had a higher carboxyl content. This value was three times higher than that in the ChCl–Lac system (Table 3). This indicates that the ester bond was severed during the ChCl–5Saa/GVL fractionation of lignin. In addition, the aliphatic hydroxyl content was three times higher than the residual lignin aliphatic hydroxyls after ChCl–Lac treatment (0.62 mmol g−1). It was 3.41 mmol g−1. This is attributed to the β-O-4 bond breakage and rapid dehydration during condensation in the DES treatment. However, a significant number of reactive oxygen functional groups were retained in the presence of GVL. The S-units and G-units produced by lignin cleavage were solubilized by GVL.37,47 This indicates that lignin mainly underwent acylation and depolymerization reactions during treatment with the ChCl–5Saa/GVL solvent system. It mainly cut the side chain groups and selectively cut α and β sites of the β-O-4 bond. In particular, both the regenerated lignin obtained from that dissolved in the ChCl–5Saa/GVL solvent system and the lignin in the residual solid retained a lot of the active hydroxyl structure.
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| Fig. 8 LNPs prepared from different types of lignin ((a) TEM; (b) particle size; (c) ζ-potential; (d) formation mechanism of LNPs; (e) UV shielding properties). | ||
UV resistance was one of the properties of lignin products.57 The transmittance of CEL-NP, AL-NP, and CLL-NP is 0%. This indicated that the LNPs have good UV resistance in the wavelength range of 200–400 nm, as shown in Fig. 8e. In comparison, AL-NP had a high transmittance. Its transmittance increased rapidly from 320 nm wavelength after. It was 30%. CSGL-NP has better UV shielding performance compared to alkali lignin. This was attributed to the small amount of –OMe and Aγ structures in the side chain of alkali lignin. The G5-unit structure was retained in the aromatic region. The rest of the structures were degraded (Fig. 5a and d). In contrast, the ChCl–5Saa/GVL–Lignin contained a large number of chromogenic groups (benzene ring, carbonyl group, double bond) and color-assisting groups (phenolic hydroxyl group, –OMe). In addition, more G-units were retained. Lignin was endowed with stronger reactivity. UV-induced radicals were effectively captured using phenolic hydroxyl groups. The oxidative damage caused by UV radiation was mitigated.58 Aging of the material was inhibited due to effective scavenging of free radicals.59 The results showed that high quality high purity lignin was fractionated using the ChCl–5Saa/GVL solvent system compared to alkali lignin and CEL. LNPs with high stability, homogeneity and high activity were prepared using this small molecular weight of highly active lignin. This opened up new possibilities for the development of high-end lignin-based materials.
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4. The homogeneous and clear mixture was removed at 80 °C and 150 rpm after 90 min of reaction. The resulting mixture was denoted as ChCl–5Saa. A solution of GVL was added to the prepared ChCl–5Saa at a certain concentration. A new DES system (ChCl–5Saa/GVL) was obtained by stirring the mixture well. The ChCl–5Saa/GVL solution was then cooled to room temperature without crystallization. The samples were stored in a desiccator to prevent moisture absorption. In addition, the properties of different deep eutectic solvent systems were compared and analyzed. A ChCl–lactic acid (ChCl–Lac) solution was prepared according to the method in the literature.60
The molecular properties of the DES solvents were analyzed by determining the Kamlet–Taft (K–T) parameters. The specific analysis method was described by Hong and co-workers.19 Nile red (NR), 4-nitroaniline (NA), and N,N-diethyl-4-nitroaniline (DENA) were dissolved in methanol. The concentrations were all 1.0 mg mL−1. 0.5 mL of NR, NA, and DENA were placed in separate centrifuge tubes. Next, 3 mL of DES solution was added, sonicated, and mixed at 25 °C. The maximum absorption wavelength of the solutions at 250–800 nm was determined using a UV spectrophotometer (CARY 3500 UV-VIS; Agilent, Santa Clara, CA, USA).
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10. Lignin fractionation was performed in a high-temperature oven (FDL 115, Binder, Neckarsulm, Germany). The residual solids collected at the end of the reaction were washed to a neutral pH using distilled water. Then, samples were washed using THF to remove reprecipitation of lignin. Finally, it was stored in a sealed container after drying at 45 °C after ultrapure water washing. Lignin was precipitated from the filtrate by adding distilled water to the filtrate. The specific procedure for determining the content of the three main components of poplar wood (cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin) is to firstly subject poplar wood to acidolytic treatment. The main components of poplar wood are converted into small molecules of monosaccharides. Then, the monosaccharide content was determined using gel permeation chromatography (GPC, AGILENT 1260 Infinity II, Agilent, Santa Clara, CA, USA). The lignin content was calculated as the sum of acid-soluble lignin and precipitated lignin. Acid-soluble lignin content was determined using a UV spectrophotometer (CARY 3500 UV-VIS; Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA, USA). The precipitated lignin content was analyzed using the weight method.62 In addition, the preparation process for the comparison samples was as follows. 1.5 × 1.5 × 5 cm poplar wood strips were mixed with ChCl–Lac, where the molar ratio of ChCl–Lac was 1
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4 and the solid–liquid ratio was 1
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10. The reaction was carried out in a high-temperature reactor at 145 °C for 6 h.26
Footnote |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d3gc04897g |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2024 |