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Photo Mikael Lund

Mikael Lund

Professor

Photo Mikael Lund

Ionization of Cellobiose in Aqueous Alkali and the Mechanism of Cellulose Dissolution

Author

  • Erik Bialik
  • Björn Stenqvist
  • Yuan Fang
  • Åsa Östlund
  • István Furó
  • Björn Lindman
  • Mikael Lund
  • Diana Bernin

Summary, in English

Cellulose, one of the most abundant renewable resources, is insoluble in most common solvents but dissolves in aqueous alkali under a narrow range of conditions. To elucidate the solubilization mechanism, we performed electrophoretic NMR on cellobiose, a subunit of cellulose, showing that cellobiose acts as an acid with two dissociation steps at pH 12 and 13.5. Chemical shift differences between cellobiose in NaOH and NaCl were estimated using 2D NMR and compared to DFT shift differences upon deprotonation. The dissociation steps are the deprotonation of the hemiacetal OH group and the deprotonation of one of four OH groups on the nonreducing anhydroglucose unit. MD simulations reveal that aggregation is suppressed upon charging cellulose chains in solution. Our findings strongly suggest that cellulose is to a large extent charged in concentrated aqueous alkali, a seemingly crucial factor for solubilization. This insight, overlooked in the current literature, is important for understanding cellulose dissolution and for synthesis of new sustainable materials.

Department/s

  • Computational Chemistry
  • Physical Chemistry
  • eSSENCE: The e-Science Collaboration

Publishing year

2016-12-15

Language

English

Pages

5044-5048

Publication/Series

The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters

Volume

7

Issue

24

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

The American Chemical Society (ACS)

Topic

  • Physical Chemistry (including Surface- and Colloid Chemistry)

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1948-7185