Structural changes in lignin of thermally treated eucalyptus wood

abstract

Changes in the lignin structure of eight eucalypt species (E. botryoides, E. globulus, E. grandis, E. maculata, E. propinqua, E. rudis, E. saligna,andE. viminalis) upon mild thermal treatment, where the temperature was gradually raised from 160 to 230 degrees C over 3 h, were studied by solid-state carbon nuclear magnetic resonance (C-13 NMR) and after lignin isolation from the wood by acidolysis employing liquid-state 1D and 2D NMR techniques. The molecular weight of the isolated lignins was assessed by size exclusion chromatography (SEC) and their composition by analytic pyrolysis coupled with gas chromatography and mass spectrometry (Py-GC/MS). The thermal treatment induced in lignin partial demethylation (up toca.30% from total) and a remarkable reduction in beta-O-4 structures (up toca.60%), in an extent depending on the ratio of syringyl and guaiacyl units of the specific lignins. The lignin molecular weight reduced onlyca.25% under the thermal treatment due to the likely occurrence of condensation reactions by homolytic and heterolytic mechanisms. The noticeable increase in phenylcoumaran (beta-5) and pinoresinol/syringaresinol (beta-beta) structures in lignin after thermal treatment was tentatively explained by their relative thermal resistance and by newly formed structures as the result of radical coupling reactions occurred during homolytic dissociation of the beta-O-4 linkages. Lignins in thermally treated wood contained more than twice phenolic hydroxyls and more aliphatic carboxyl groups than lignins in untreated wood.

keywords

MILD TORREFACTION; HEAT-TREATMENT; STRENGTH LOSS; PYROLYSIS; TRANSFORMATION; CRYSTALLINITY; DISSOCIATION; PERFORMANCE; BIOMASS; MODEL

subject category

Materials Science

authors

Lourenco, A; Araujo, S; Gominho, J; Pereira, H; Evtuguin, D

our authors

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