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Fractionation by Sequential Antisolvent Precipitation of Grass, Softwood, and Hardwood Lignins Isolated Using Low-Cost Ionic Liquids and Water

Clementine L. Chambon, Vivi Fitriyanti, Pedro Verdía, Shirley Min Yang, Servann Hérou, Maria‐Magdalena Titirici, Agnieszka Brandt‐Talbot, Paul S. Fennell, Jason P. Hallett

2020ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering65 citationsDOI

Abstract

In this study, fractionation by sequential antisolvent precipitation was applied to ionoSolv lignins for the first time. Pretreatment with the aqueous low-cost protic ionic liquid N,N-dimethylbutylammonium hydrogen sulfate ([DMBA][HSO4], 80 wt % in water) was applied to Miscanthus (herbaceous), willow (hardwood), and pine (softwood) to extract lignin. Then, lignin was sequentially precipitated by the addition of water as an antisolvent. Fractionation appeared to be controlled by the molecular weight of lignin polymers. Fractions isolated with minimal water volumes were shown to have high molecular weight, polydispersity, thermal stability, and Tg (178 °C). Later precipitates were more monodisperse and had high phenolic and total hydroxyl content and lower thermal stability and Tg (136 °C). Addition of 1 g of water per gram of dry IL was able to precipitate up to 90 wt % of lignin. Fractional precipitation represents a novel lignin isolation technique that can be performed as part of the lignin recovery procedure enabling a high degree of control of lignin properties. The effect of the fractionation on lignin structural, chemical, and thermal properties was thoroughly examined by two-dimensional heteronuclear single quantum coherence nuclear magnetic resonance, gel permeation chromatography, thermogravimetric analysis, and differential scanning calorimetry and compared to the unfractionated lignin precipitate obtained by addition of an excess of water.

Topics & Concepts

LigninChemistrySoftwoodHardwoodFractionationOrganosolvGel permeation chromatographyDifferential scanning calorimetryAqueous solutionPrecipitationChemical engineeringChromatographyOrganic chemistryPolymerMaterials scienceBotanyBiologyMeteorologyComposite materialThermodynamicsEngineeringPhysicsLignin and Wood ChemistryFermentation and Sensory AnalysisBiochemical and biochemical processes
Fractionation by Sequential Antisolvent Precipitation of Grass, Softwood, and Hardwood Lignins Isolated Using Low-Cost Ionic Liquids and Water | Litcius