Molecular mechanism of the transformation of oxidized lignin to N-substituted aromatics

Literature Information

Publication Date 2023-10-25
DOI 10.1039/D3OB01398G
Impact Factor 3.876
Authors

Xueli Mu, Shijie Sun, Zhihao Li, Lingli Han, Kang Lv


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Abstract

The cleavage of C–C bonds in oxidized lignin model compounds is a highly effective methodology for achieving lignin depolymerization, as well the generation of N-substituted aromatics. Here, density functional theory calculations were performed to understand the mechanism of the transformation of an oxidized lignin model compound (ligninox) and hydroxylamine hydrochloride to N-substituted aromatics. The reaction was proposed to proceed via an energetically viable mechanism featuring the initial production of HOAc acting as proton bridge. According to our calculations, Z-type oxime is the major intermediate of the reaction, with an energy barrier of 22.9 kcal mol−1, owing to the weak interactions between methoxy and oximino groups being stronger than that of E-type oxime. Additionally, the hydroxy addition is the rate-determining step, with an energy barrier of 27.0 kcal mol−1. Moreover, the huge net energy change of Beckmann and abnormal Beckmann rearrangements is the main overall thermodynamic driving force for producing N-substituted aromatics from oximes. The theoretical results have provided a clear picture of how ligninox transforms into N-substituted aromatics and are expected to provide valuable theoretical guidance for lignin depolymerization.

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Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry

Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry
CiteScore: 3.4
Self-citation Rate: 10.3%
Articles per Year: 1041

Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry (OBC) publishes original and high impact research and reviews in organic chemistry. We welcome research that shows new or significantly improved protocols or methodologies in total synthesis, synthetic methodology or physical and theoretical organic chemistry as well as research that shows a significant advance in the organic chemistry or molecular design aspects of chemical biology, catalysis, supramolecular and macromolecular chemistry, theoretical chemistry, mechanism-oriented physical organic chemistry, medicinal chemistry or natural products. Articles published in the journal should report new work which makes a highly-significant impact in the field. Routine and incremental work is generally not suitable for publication in the journal. More details about key areas of our scope are below. In all cases authors should include in their article clear rationale for why their research has been carried out.

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