Open Access Article
S. G. Elliot
ac,
C. Andersen
b,
S. Tolborg
ac,
S. Meier
c,
I. Sádaba
a,
A. E. Daugaard
b and
E. Taarning*a
aHaldor Topsøe A/S, Haldor Topsøes Allé 1, 2800-Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark. E-mail: esta@topsoe.dk
bDanish Polymer Centre, Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering Technical University of Denmark, Sølvtoftsplads, 2800-Kgs Lyngby, Denmark
cDepartment of Chemistry, Technical University of Denmark, Kemitorvet, 2800-Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark
First published on 4th January 2017
We report here the direct formation of the new chemical product trans-2,5-dihydroxy-3-pentenoic acid methyl ester from pentoses using tin-containing silicates as catalysts. The product is formed under alkali-free conditions in methanol at temperatures in the range 140–180 °C. The highest yields are found using Sn-Beta as the catalyst. Under optimised conditions, a yield of 33% is achieved. Purified trans-2,5-dihydroxy-3-pentenoic acid methyl ester was used for co-polymerisation studies with ethyl 6-hydroxyhexanoate using Candida antarctica lipase B as the catalyst. The co-polymerisation yields a product containing functional groups originating from trans-2,5-dihydroxy-3-pentenoic acid methyl ester in the polyester backbone. The reactivity of the incorporated olefin and hydroxyl moieties was investigated using trifluoroacetic anhydride and thiol–ene chemistry, thus illustrating the potential for functionalising the new co-polymers.
2,5-Furandicarboxylic acid is accessible via acid catalysed dehydration of fructose, followed by oxidation.10–12 When 2,5-furandicarboxylic acid is polymerised with ethylene glycol, polyethylene furanoate is formed.13 This polyester has been shown to have favourable barrier properties compared to PET plastics, indicating that it may be developed as a useful material in the packaging materials segment.6 Ethylene glycol itself can be produced in various ways for instance by catalytic hydrogenation of sorbitol in yields of up to 37%
14 or directly from glucose in combination with retro-aldol co-catalysts such as tungsten salts in yields of 35–75%.15,16 In a different catalytic approach using acid catalysis, sorbitol can be dehydrated to give isosorbide. This diol has been successfully polymerised with different dicarboxylic acids resulting in new types of polyester materials, some of which have already become commercial products.6,7 Adipic acid is accessible from glucose in two steps by catalytic hydrogenation of glucaric acid.17 Racemic methyl lactate can be made directly from C6 sugars in yields up to 75% using tin-containing silicates as catalysts.18 Lactic acid is an established polyester building block used in the production of poly(lactic acid) which has become widely used as a bio-based polyester material within the packaging materials segment.19 The newest and least known member of this group is methyl vinyl glycolate (MVG), which can be made directly from C6 sugars in yields up to 20% as a co-product to methyl lactate and from C4 sugars in yields up to 60%.8,20–22 Due to its chemical similarity to lactic acid, MVG can be co-polymerised with lactic acid to produce a co-polyester having pendant vinyl groups that allow for post functionalisation.23 Here, we report that pentose sugars can be converted into a new activated polyester building block, trans-2,5-dihydroxy-3-pentenoic acid methyl ester (DPM), in one step using tin-containing silicates as catalysts. We have furthermore isolated gram quantities of DPM and we show the successful co-polymerisation of DPM and ethyl 6-hydroxyhexanoate (E6-HH) using enzymatic polymerisation. The co-polymers can be functionalised by thiolation or acetylation of the olefin and hydroxyl moiety, respectively.
The catalytic conversion of sugars to lactic acid derivatives using tin-containing silicates has been reported for all simple monosaccharides.20,21,24,25 The first report was related to triose sugars in water and methanol and later reports described similar chemistry occurring for hexoses, tetroses and pentoses. The product selectivity varies, depending on the length of the sugar molecule. Trioses form exclusively lactates while tetroses lead to high yields of MVG. Pentoses and hexoses form multiple products, depending amongst other factors on the presence of co-solutes in the reaction medium. Recently we have shown that trans-2,5,6-trihydroxy-3-hexenoic acid methyl ester (THM) is formed in yields of 15–18% from hexoses using tin-containing silicates as catalysts and in the absence of added co-solutes. The reaction pathway was elucidated and 3-deoxyglucosone was identified as the intermediate responsible for the formation of this product and of related lactones and 5-hydroxymethyl furfural derivatives.26
We here continue our exploration of chemo-catalytic sugar processing, taking these reports into consideration. A product pattern emerges based on the prior reports consisting of the homologous series of α-hydroxy esters: THM from hexoses, MVG from tetroses and methyl lactate from trioses. From this trend, a similar C5 product can be predicted for pentoses (Scheme 1). This product, DPM, is the activated and biocompatible ester version of trans-2,5-dihydroxy-3-pentenoic acid recently identified among trihydroxypentanoic acid derivatives formed from xylose in water.29 Here, we verify that this product, DPM, is indeed formed in yields of up to 33% from the pentoses xylose, lyxose and ribose. This finding shows that tin-containing silicates display a remarkable ability to catalyse consecutive dehydrations of sugars to afford intermediary β,γ-unsaturated α-keto-aldehydes which are converted into the β,γ-unsaturated α-hydroxy ester end products (Scheme 1).
![]() | ||
| Scheme 1 Formation of homologous α-hydroxy ester products from C3–C6 sugars catalysed by tin-containing silicates. The reaction is applicable both to aldoses and ketoses. | ||
Tin-containing silicates are solid Lewis acid materials that are capable of activating carbonyl groups in small molecules and catalyse simple transformations. Examples include Baeyer–Villiger oxidation, Meerwein–Ponndorf–Verley–Oppenauer redox reactions, monosaccharide isomerisation, aldol- and retro-aldol reactions and certain dehydration reactions.30–36 The most studied tin-containing silicate is Sn-Beta, in which tin is incorporated into a framework of silica having the *BEA topology. Sn-Beta is often reported as being a superior catalyst compared to other tin-containing silicates for these reactions.18,30,31,37,38 Currently, this supposed superiority of Sn-Beta is not well understood, especially under operando conditions. Recent work aimed at elucidating the catalytic functioning of Sn-Beta includes DFT calculations, FT-IR, TPR and 119Sn-NMR spectroscopy.39–44 Despite it being a crystalline material, the preparation method often greatly influences the catalytic performance. Two principally different preparation methods are normally used, direct synthesis under hydrothermal conditions using hydrofluoric acid as mineralising agent [Sn-Beta (HT)] and synthesis by post treatment of a dealuminated Beta zeolite with a tin source [Sn-Beta (PT)]. The Sn-Beta (HT) typically consists of large hydrophobic crystals of 3–5 μm with few defects. Tin loadings up to 2% are typically employed, as it is difficult to incorporate higher loadings of tin.45 Sn-Beta (PT) is made from a parent Al-Beta zeolite which has been dealuminated. The Sn-Beta (PT) crystal size is inherited from the parent material and is often in the range of 0.2–1 μm in diameter. The material contains many defects, causing it to be more hydrophilic than the Sn-Beta (HT). Several different methods of incorporating tin into the dealuminated zeolite are being employed such as vapour-phase deposition,46 solid state ion exchange47 and reflux in isopropyl alcohol with a tin salt.48
We synthesised Sn-Beta (HT) and Sn-Beta (PT) with a tin content of 1.25–1.5% alongside other tin-containing silicates and other Lewis acidic Beta zeolites. These materials were tested in the production of DPM from xylose in methanol with the aim of identifying activity patterns and optimising the DPM yield.
Zr-Beta (Si/Zr = 150) and Al-Beta (Si/Al = 150) zeolites were prepared by the aforementioned procedure, exchanging the tin source with zirconyl chloride octahydrate (Sigma-Aldrich, 98%) or aluminium chloride hexahydrate (Fluka, ≥99%), respectively. Furthermore, Al-Beta was incubated for only 5 days at 140 °C. For Ti-Beta (Si/Ti = 150), tetraethyl orthotitanate (Aldrich) was first dissolved in a mixture of hydrogen peroxide and water and then used in a similar fashion as the metal source. SnO2-Beta (Si/Sn = 200) was synthesised using tin oxide (Aldrich, <100 nm) as the tin source. Purely siliceous Beta (Si-Beta) was prepared by omitting the addition of a metal source.
Sn-Beta (Si/Sn = 125) via post-treatment was prepared according to a modification of the procedure described by Hammond et al.47 Commercial zeolite Beta (Zeolyst, Si/Al = 12.5, NH4+-form) was calcined at 550 °C for 6 h and dealuminated by treatment with 10 g of concentrated nitric acid (Sigma-Aldrich, ≥65%) per gram of zeolite Beta powder for 12 h at 80 °C. The solid was recovered by filtration, washed and calcined (550 °C for 6 h). The dealuminated zeolite was then impregnated by incipient wetness methodology with a Si/Sn ratio of 125. For this purpose, tin(II) chloride (0.128 g, Sigma-Aldrich, 98%) was dissolved in water (5.75 mL) and added to 5 g of the solid. After the impregnation process, the sample was dried at 110 °C for 12 h and calcined again.
Sn-MFI (Si/Sn = 100) was prepared following a procedure described by Mal et al.50 In a typical synthesis, tin(IV) chloride pentahydrate (Aldrich, 98%) was dissolved in 5 g of demineralised water and added to 15.6 g of tetraethyl orthosilicate (98%, Aldrich). This mixture was then stirred for 30 min. Afterwards, 13.4 g of tetrapropylammonium hydroxide (40%, AppliChem) in 13.4 g of demineralised water was added and stirred for 1 h, and subsequently an additional 60 g of demineralised water was added. The solution was then left stirring for 20 h. The gel was transferred to a Teflon®-lined autoclave and synthesised at 160 °C for 2 days under static conditions. The solid was recovered by filtration, washed with ample water and dried overnight at 80 °C followed by calcination (2 °C min−1, 550 °C, 6 h dwell time) to obtain the finished material.
Sn-MCM-41 (Si/Sn = 200) was prepared according to the method described by Li et al.51 In a typical synthesis, 26.4 g of tetraethylammonium silicate (Aldrich, 15–20 wt% in water, ≥99.99%) was slowly added to a solution of 13.0 g of hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide (Sigma, ≥99.0%) dissolved in 38.0 g of water and allowed to stir for 1 h. At this point, tin(IV) chloride pentahydrate (Aldrich, 98%) and hydrochloric acid (Sigma-Aldrich, min. 37%) in 2.1 g of water was added drop wise to the solution and allowed to stir for 1.5 h. To this solution, 12.2 g of tetraethylorthosilicate (98%, Aldrich) was added and stirred for 3 h. The sample was then transferred to a Teflon®-lined container in a stainless steel autoclave and placed in a pre-heated oven at 140 °C for 15 h. The solid was recovered by filtration, washed with ample water and dried overnight at 80 °C. The material was finalised by calcination, heating the sample to 550 °C at 2 °C min−1 in static air and maintaining this temperature for 6 h.
Sn-SBA-15 (Si/Sn = 200) was prepared following the synthesis route described by Ramaswamy et al.52 In a typical synthesis, 1.0 g of hydrochloric acid (37 wt%, Fluka) in 140 g of demineralised water was added to a solution of 8.0 g of Pluronic® P-123 (PEG–PPG–PEG polymer, Aldrich, Mw = ∼5800 g mol−1) in 60 g of demineralised water. The solution was then stirred for 2 h. To the synthesis mixture 18.0 g of tetraethyl orthosilicate (98%, Aldrich) was added followed by tin(IV) chloride pentahydrate (Aldrich, 98%) dissolved in 2.0 g of demineralised water. The mixture was then stirred for 24 h at 40 °C and then transferred to a Teflon®-lined autoclave and heated to 100 °C for 24 h. The solid was recovered by filtration, washed with ample water and then calcined at 550 °C for 6 hours.
An Agilent 1200 series HPLC equipped with an Aminex HPX-87H (BioRad) column (0.004 M H2SO4, 0.6 mL min−1, 65 °C) using a refractive index and diode array detector was used for detection and quantification of furfural, furfural dimethylacetal and other analogues. The aqueous acidic eluent hydrolyses all furfural analogues back to furfural, resulting in a collective quantification of all furanics (FUR).
One-dimensional 1H NMR spectra were used to quantify 3-deoxy-γ-pentonolactones (DPL), 2,4,5-trihydroxy-3-pentanoic acid methyl ester (TPM) and 2,5-dihydroxy-4-methoxy-pentanoic acid methyl ester (DMPM) using the CH3 signal at 1.39 ppm from ML as a reference. Spectra were recorded directly on reaction mixtures in methanol after removal of catalyst and upon addition of 10% (v/v) D4-methanol (Cambridge Isotopes). Spectra were recorded on a Bruker Avance III spectrometer equipped with a 9.4 T magnet and a BBO probe. Methanol proton resonances were suppressed by presaturation at frequencies of 3.36 ppm, 4.786 ppm using the two logical channels of the spectrometer. Spectra were recorded at 30 °C by sampling 8096 complex data points during an acquisition time of 1.02 seconds, employing an inter-scan delay of 10 seconds and accumulating 16 scans.
Two-dimensional 1H–13C HSQC spectra were used to quantify methyl glycosides (MG) and residual substrate relative to DPM at natural 13C isotopic abundance. The 1H–13C HSQC spectra had a 13C carrier offset of 101 ppm and employed a spectral width of 22 ppm to sample the anomeric region of xylose and its methyl glycosides at high resolution and sensitivity. Samples were prepared by condensing 1 mL of the filtered reaction mixture using a SpeedVac vacuum concentrator and redissolving the resultant residue in D4-methanol. These spectra were recorded on a Bruker Avance III HD spectrometer equipped with a 9.4 T magnet and a Bruker CryoProbe Prodigy, sampling 1024 and 128 complex data points in the 1H and 13C spectral dimensions for acquisition times of 292 and 58 milliseconds, respectively. Spectra were processed with extensive zero filling in all dimensions and integrated in Topspin 3.5.
In samples where DPM or ML were present in less than 10%, estimations of DPL, TPM, DMPM, MG and residual substrate were quantified by a combination of an Agilent 1200 series HPLC equipped with a Carbohydrate (Zorbax) column (60 wt% acetonitrile/water, 0.5 mL min−1, 30 °C) and two-dimensional 1H–13C HSQC employing standard addition of xylose. 50 μL of a 100 mM stock solution in D4-methanol was added to the sample and spectra were re-recorded by the aforementioned two-dimensional 1H–13C HSQC procedure.
000 g mol−1) and 0.030 g of poly(E6-HH-co-DPM) was dissolved in 6 mL of tetrahydrofuran. The mixture was transferred to a Teflon® mold and the solvent was allowed to evaporate in a closed vessel at room temperature to ensure a slow evaporation of the solvent. The resulting film was hotpressed at 70 °C for 10 min to ensure a uniform, flat film.
The central intermediate 3-DX can be transformed into DPL via a 1,2-hydride shift of its intramolecular hemiacetal. Xylose give rise to two different DPL diastereomers that can be discerned by NMR spectroscopy. We speculate these to be 3-deoxy-γ-D-xylonolactone and 3-deoxy-γ-D-lyxonolactone, formed by racemisation on C2 in the 1,2-hydride shift step. In an analogous open chain form, 3-DX can react with methanol to form a hemiacetal which can undergo a 1,2-hydride shift leading to TPM. From 3-DX a subsequent dehydration can also occur, leading to cis/trans-3,4-dideoxyxylos-3-enone (cis/trans-3,4-DXE). The trans-3,4-DXE isomer can undergo reactive esterification leading to DPM while cis-3,4-DXE is a likely precursor for furfural via a third dehydration step. Interestingly, 3-deoxy xylosone has previously been reported as an intermediate in the formation of furfural from pentoses.27,28 In the current study, we often find that the yields of furfural derivatives and DPM are correlated, supporting that this is indeed an important intermediate in the formation of furfural species using Lewis acidic catalysts. This interpretation is furthermore supported by the use of the Brønsted acidic Al-Beta as the catalyst, resulting in the formation of only trace amounts of furfural products (1%) and no detectable DPM. In contrast, Sn-Beta forms 11–17% furfural products and 23–33% DPM under comparable conditions. A small amount of DMPM was also observed as a product. This is likely formed via Michael addition of methanol to 3,4-DXE, prior to a 1,2-hydride shift, thereby being analogous to the formation of MMHB from tetroses.20,21
:
5), while Sn-Beta (PT) resulted in a lower DPM yield of 23% (Table 1, entry 2) and showed a lower ratio (1
:
2). This difference is likely attributable to the balance of Brønsted and Lewis acidity in the two materials. Sn-Beta (PT) contains more defects due to being synthesised by a post treatment method, likely resulting in a more Brønsted acidic character.39,53 Additionally, the different preparation methods may lead to a different incorporation of tin into the *BEA siliceous matrix.39,53,54 An indication of the different acidity balance for Sn-Beta (HT) and Sn-Beta (PT) is seen when comparing their yields of MG being 6% and 23%, respectively. Of all the tin-containing silicates tested, the small pore Sn-MFI material displays the lowest selectivity towards DPM and dehydration products. The main products formed after two hours are methyl glycosides, indicating that the pentoses are not converted preferentially via Lewis acid catalysed pathways but instead have time to undergo acetalisation reactions which are typically catalysed by Brønsted acids.55 Other tin-containing silicates such as the ordered mesoporous materials Sn-SBA-15 and Sn-MCM-41 were also active for the formation of DPM, resulting in yields of 12% and 16% yield, respectively. These catalysts all belong to the group of tin-containing silicates and are all able to form DPM in significant yields. In contrast, materials having tin outside of the siliceous matrix, such as dispersed SnO2 nanoparticles on Si-Beta, did not catalyse the formation of DPM under these reaction conditions (Table 1, entry 6). This finding highlights the importance of successfully incorporating tin in the silicate matrix to obtain catalytically active heterogeneous catalysts.
| Entry | Catalyst | XYL, % | MG, % | Retro-aldol | Dehydration | Carbon balance, % | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GA-DMA, % | ML, % | MVG, % | MMHB, % | Total, % | DPL, % | TPM/DMPMb, % | FURc, % | DPM, % | Total, % | |||||
| a All reactions employed the standard reaction conditions: 360 mg xylose (8.3 wt%), 4 g methanol, 180 mg catalyst, 2 h, 160 °C and 600 rpm stirring. Reactions were performed in triplicates and standard deviations of the last digit are given in parenthesis for DPM; full values and deviations for all products are provided in Table S2. n.d. = not detected. Refer to Scheme 2 for product abbreviations.b Combined yields (carbon%) of 2,4,5-trihydroxy-3-pentanoic acid methyl ester and 2,5-dihydroxy-4-methoxy-pentanoic acid methyl ester.c Combined yields (carbon%) of furfural and furfural dimethyl acetal.d Dispersed SnO2 nanoparticles on Si-Beta. | ||||||||||||||
| 1 | Sn-Beta (HT) | n.d. | 4 | 2 | 14 | 2 | <1 | 19 | 10 | 13 | 11 | 33 (3) | 68 | 90 (4) |
| 2 | Sn-Beta (PT) | n.d. | 23 | 3 | 11 | <1 | <1 | 15 | 6 | 9 | 17 | 23 (1) | 55 | 93 (3) |
| 3 | Sn-MFI | <1 | 30 | 6 | 17 | 1 | <1 | 24 | 3 | 3 | 10 | 11 (1) | 27 | 82 (5) |
| 4 | Sn-MCM-41 | n.d. | 23 | 4 | 12 | <1 | <1 | 18 | 6 | 14 | 20 | 16 (1) | 57 | 98 (5) |
| 5 | Sn-SBA-15 | <1 | 32 | 6 | 11 | <1 | <1 | 18 | 3 | 10 | 18 | 12 (1) | 42 | 92 (6) |
| 6 | SnO2-Betad | 53 | 42 | 2 | <1 | <1 | <1 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 1 | <1 | 6 | 104 (7) |
| 7 | Ti-Beta | <1 | 48 | 7 | 11 | 3 | <1 | 22 | 4 | 7 | 5 | <1 | 16 | 86 |
| 8 | Zr-Beta | <1 | 39 | 12 | 10 | 2 | <1 | 25 | 2 | 2 | 4 | <1 | 9 | 73 |
| 9 | Al-Beta | 6 | 82 | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | 0 | n.d. | n.d. | 1 | n.d. | 1 | 89 (1) |
| 10 | Si-Beta | 13 | 42 | 5 | 2 | <1 | <1 | 8 | 2 | 3 | 3 | <1 | 8 | 71 |
| 11 | Blank | 88 | 6 | <1 | <1 | <1 | <1 | 1 | n.d. | n.d. | <1 | n.d. | 1 | 96 (1) |
![]() | ||
| Fig. 1 Product distribution of tin-containing silicates based on data from Table 1. Reaction conditions: 0.360 g xylose, 0.180 g catalyst, 4.0 g methanol, 160 °C, 2 hours. | ||
The purely siliceous material Si-Beta did not catalyse the formation of significant amounts of DPM, and the main product observed was MG (Table 1, entry 10). Catalysts having other metals than tin incorporated into the framework such as titanium, zirconium and aluminium did not form significant yields of DPM from xylose either (Table 1, entry 7–9). However, both Ti-Beta and Zr-Beta gave appreciable yields of retro-aldol products (22–25%), which is in accordance with previous reports of these materials being active for the formation of lactates.20 The formation of DPM, in contrast, occurs via a different reaction pathway that is seemingly only catalysed by the tin-containing silicates. The same trend was reported for the formation of THM from hexoses using the same types of materials.26 The highly Brønsted acidic Al-Beta was found to convert xylose into methyl glycosides with a high selectivity, which is in accordance with previous findings.56 No formation of DPM was observed, while small amounts of furfural were detected (ca. 1%).
We would like to draw attention to the yields of furanic products and DPM in the comparison of Zr-Beta and Ti-Beta with all the tin-containing silicates. Low yields of furanic products (4–5%) are observed for the zirconium and titanium materials while all tin-containing silicates form substantially higher yields (10–20%). This observation supports the aforementioned hypothesis, that the majority of the furanic products is formed via a 3-DX route for the tin-containing silicates. The inability of the titanium and zirconium materials to catalyse the formation of 3-DX from xylose thus also prevents a substantial co-production of furanic compounds.
The effect of reaction temperature on the yield of DPM was insignificant and similar yields (31–34%) were obtained in the temperature range of 140–180 °C (Table S4†). The reaction temperature effect appeared to be more pronounced for yields of other reaction products, with higher temperatures favouring retro-aldol products (9% difference) and lower temperatures favouring furanics (8% difference).
It had previously been shown for hexoses that alkali co-solutes significantly diminish the yield of THM and furanic products, leading to increased yields of retro-aldol products, from 30% in the absence of alkali to 75% in the presence of 0.065 mM of added potassium carbonate.18 We find that an analogous effect exists for the conversion of pentoses (Fig. 2), illustrating that optimal yields of DPM require a strict control of alkali contaminants. We found by ICP measurements that a background alkali level of 1.3 wt ppm was present even under “alkali free” conditions, possibly originating from the borosilicate glassware.
![]() | ||
| Fig. 2 Product distribution at different alkali concentrations using Sn-Beta, based on data from Table S5.† Reaction conditions: 0.360 g xylose, 0.180 g Sn-Beta (HT, Si/Sn = 150), 4.0 g methanol, 160 °C, 2 hours. Yields of TPM and DMPM and DPL are not included in this graph. Refer to Scheme 2 for abbreviations. | ||
The catalyst to substrate ratio was varied from 0.125 to 1.0 on weight basis, while keeping the substrate concentration constant at 8.3 wt% xylose. Interestingly, a strong dependence on catalyst loading was found, as selectivity towards DPM increased significantly from a catalyst to substrate ratio of 0.125 (19% DPM) up to 0.5 (34% DPM) (Table S4†). The formation of retro-aldol products followed the opposite trend, decreasing with increased catalyst to substrate ratios from a combined yield of 32% at a catalyst to substrate ratio of 0.125 to just 15% at a ratio of 1.0.
The effect of the xylose concentration in the reaction mixture was tested, keeping the catalyst to substrate ratio constant at 0.5. Surprisingly, increasing the concentration did not lower the yield of DPM and using a 23 wt% solution of xylose in methanol gave a similar yield of 32% as an 8.3 wt% solution (Table S3†).
Finally, two other pentoses (ribose and lyxose) were tested as substrates and found to give DPM yields of 30% and 31%, respectively (Table S3†).
The enzymatic co-polymerisations between DPM and E6-HH were performed at 60 °C in bulk monomer in accordance with the general procedure described in the Experimental section. The NMR spectrum of the resulting polymer (Fig. 3) shows that that the vinylic hydrogen atoms from DPM are present, while the alcohol, alkene and ester functional groups were confirmed by FT-IR spectroscopy (Fig. S6†).
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| Fig. 3 1H NMR assignment of the co-polymer product, poly(E6-HH-co-DPM), from Table 2 entry 4. | ||
The polymer synthesis procedure was varied to study the effects of feed ratio and polymerisation time on the resulting polymers. Polymerisation time was studied by conducting co-polymerisation experiments using a DPM to E6-HH molar ratio of 0.22 and varying the reaction times (Table 2, entries 2–4). The shortest polymerisation time of 18 h resulted in the incorporation of approximately 55% (0.12 molar ratio) of the DPM from the feed into the co-polymer. By increasing the polymerisation time to first 42 h and subsequently to 72 h, incorporation was increased to 77% (0.17 molar ratio). At all tested reaction times reasonable degrees of polymerisation (Mw = 10
000–12
350 g mol−1) and polydispersity indices (PDI = 2.1–2.5) were obtained, comparable to typical results from enzymatic polymerisation of monomers containing both secondary and primary alcohols.61,62
| Entry | Time h | Feed MRb | Prod. MRb,c | Tgd, °C | Tmd, °C | Mne, g mol−1 | Mwe, g mol−1 | PDIe |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| a All reactions were performed at 60 °C and the pressure was held at 200 mbar for 2 h whereafter it was reduced to 5 mbar in accordance with optimisations performed with E6-HH (see ESI).b Molar ratio (MR) listed as DPM/E6-HH [mol mol−1].c Determined by 1H NMR.d Determined by DSC.e Determined by SEC in THF using PS standards.f Using only E6-HH as monomer. | ||||||||
| 1f | 18 | 0 | 0 | −60.2 | 48.9 | 3600 | 4700 | 1.3 |
| 2 | 18 | 0.22 | 0.12 | −49.3 | 42.8 | 5150 | 10 050 |
2.1 |
| 3 | 42 | 0.22 | 0.14 | −49.3 | 42.5 | 4490 | 10 750 |
2.4 |
| 4 | 72 | 0.22 | 0.17 | −50.0 | 34.2 | 5000 | 12 350 |
2.5 |
| 5 | 72 | 0.44 | 0.44 | −55.5 | 15.1 | 1900 | 4500 | 2.4 |
| 6 | 72 | 0.66 | 0.66 | −52.3 | 7.5 | 1760 | 3700 | 2.1 |
These findings clearly showed that DPM was more challenging to polymerise than E6-HH, which was also evident by DPM being unable to homo-polymerise. Nevertheless, DPM should become incorporated at longer polymerisation times and higher DPM fractions in the feed (Table 2).
A study of varying the feed ratio of E6-HH to DPM from a molar ratio of 0.22 to 0.66 showed that the content of DPM in the co-polymer increased with increased ratio. This lead to full incorporation of DPM into the co-polymers at polymerisation times of 72 h and molecular ratios above 0.44. Despite full incorporation of DPM, these polymerisations resulted in molecular weights of only 4500 and 3700 g mol−1 for 0.44 and 0.66 molar ratio, respectively. Molecular weights above 10
000 g mol−1 as observed with 0.22 molar ratio DPM could not be obtained for these co-polymerisations.
The thermal properties of all the co-polymers were investigated by DSC and showed glass transition temperatures (Tg) between −49 °C to −56 °C, which is typical for aliphatic polyesters and confirms the flexible nature of the polymer chain. The melting temperature (Tm) at 0.12 molar ratio of DPM was determined to be 42.8 °C and Tm decreased with increasing content of DPM to 7.5 °C at 0.66 molar ratio DPM. The incorporation of DPM clearly prevents the regularity and close chain-to-chain packing required for the polymer to crystallise, thereby reducing the melting temperature.
These initial studies clearly show that DPM can be successfully polymerised with other similar monomers thereby providing access to functional polymers. Furthermore, the degree of incorporation may be used to manipulate the physical properties of the co-polymer.
Additionally, thiol–ene chemistry was used to demonstrate the reactivity of the intra-chain alkene.23 Thiol–ene chemistry is a well-established protocol for functionalisation of polymers by formation of alkyl sulphides via reaction of a thiol and an alkene using radical chemistry.65,66 Here, a photo initiator (2,2-dimethoxy-2-phenylacetophenone, DMPA) was used together with a selection of thiol compounds (Scheme 3) to illustrate the potential for post-polymerisation functionalisation.
The functionalisation of DPM sub-units in the thiol–ene experiments was determined using 1H and 1H–13C NMR following diminished double bond proton intensities within the polymer upon functionalisation. Thiol–ene reactions varied between 30 and 100% conversion, with the least sterically hindered substituents yielding the highest conversion (Scheme 3, polymers IIIa–e). Poor solubility of the functionalised co-polymer materials in DMSO and chloroform prevented conclusive studies of the regioselectivity in the thiol–ene reactions. We found that in particular mercaptoacetic acid and mercaptoethanol (Scheme 3, polymer IIIb–c) were effective grafting reagents, making it possible to fully convert the in-chain double bond, clearly demonstrating the polymers high potential for functionalisation. In-chain alkenes are estimated to have an approximately 10-fold lower reactivity compared to corresponding pendent alkenes.67 The high extent of functionalisation in the polymer observed herein is thus extraordinary and underlines the potential of in-chain alkenes for preparation of functional polymers.
Three different films consisting of pure PCL, a PCL blend with 10 wt% poly(E6-HH-co-DPM) (PECD–PCL) and a PCL blend with 10 wt% trifluroacetic acid functionalised poly(E6-HH-co-DPM) (PECD(TFA)–PCL) were prepared by solvent casting and hot-pressing. The prepared films were investigated by water contact angle (WCA) measurements to determine the impact on surface properties of the blend (Table 3).
| Film | Advancing WCA deg | Receding WCA deg |
|---|---|---|
| a All water contact angles (WCA) were determined as averages of three measurements of three different drops at different positions on the polymer surface and standard deviations of the last digit are given in parenthesis.b WCA value for PCL from literature.68c The film contained 10 wt% poly(E6-HH-co-DPM).d The film contained 10 wt% TFA functionalised poly(E6-HH-co-DPM). | ||
| PCLb | 90 (1) | 46 (1) |
| PCL | 85 (2) | 46 (2) |
| PECD–PCLc | 75 (1) | 38 (2) |
| PECD(TFA)–PCLd | 93 (2) | 36 (2) |
The pure PCL film had an advancing WCA of 85°, which was reduced to 75° by blending with the DPM co-polymer. This shows the impact of the free hydroxyl groups from the co-polymer, and could be exploited to increase the hydrophilicity of the thin film. This was corroborated with the receding WCA, which is reduced by almost 10° for the blend, indicating the presence of more polar groups in the system. Conversely, blending PCL with the trifluroacetic acid functionalised poly(E6-HH-co-DPM) resulted in an increase in the advancing WCA up to 93°, which is expected from increasing the hydrophobicity of the film due to the fluorine in the co-polymer. The receding WCA was not affected from blending in the fluorinated co-polymer, which showed that the system is still amphiphilic. Both results show that the co-polymer is able to modify the surface properties of the thin film blend, and that post-modification of the co-polymer permits exploitation of the functional groups for further modification of the surface of thin film blends.
The chemoenzymatic approach described herein thus enables future bio-refineries to better utilise pentoses from hemicellulose-containing biomass, providing the chemical industry with new types of interesting polymer building blocks.
Footnote |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c6ra26708d |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2017 |