Issue 1, 2015

Ionic liquids: not always innocent solvents for cellulose

Abstract

The decomposition pathways of a series of carbohydrates dissolved in carboxylate ionic liquids have been investigated in detail using a broad range of thermal and chromatographic techniques. Mixtures of the carboxylate ionic liquid 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium acetate with carbohydrates were found to undergo reaction of the C2 carbon of the imidazolium ring with the aldehyde functionality on the open chain sugar, yielding an imidazolium adduct with a hydroxylated alkyl chain. Subsequently, degradation of the hydroxyalkyl chain occurs by sequential loss of formaldehyde units, to yield a terminal adduct species, 1-ethyl-2-(hydroxymethyl)-3-methylimidazolium acetate. Identities of the final and intermediate adduct species, and the reaction mechanisms connecting adducts, were elucidated by NMR, HPLC and LCMS techniques. Factors affecting the rate and quantity of adduct formation were explored. Changing the ionic liquid cation and anion, the acid number, sugar concentration and temperature influenced the rate of formation and relative quantities of the adduct species. Formation of adducts could not be entirely prevented when employing carboxylate ionic liquids. By contrast, 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride was identified as an ionic liquid capable of dissolving a significant quantity of cellulose, yet without reacting with carbohydrates.

Graphical abstract: Ionic liquids: not always innocent solvents for cellulose

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
08 out 2014
Accepted
30 out 2014
First published
31 out 2014
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Green Chem., 2015,17, 231-243

Author version available

Ionic liquids: not always innocent solvents for cellulose

M. T. Clough, K. Geyer, P. A. Hunt, S. Son, U. Vagt and T. Welton, Green Chem., 2015, 17, 231 DOI: 10.1039/C4GC01955E

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