Abstract

Lignin is the main plant cell wall component responsible for recalcitrance in the process of lignocellulosic biomass conversion into biofuels. The recalcitrance and insolubility of lignin in different reaction media are due in part to the hydrogen bonds and π interactions that hold syringyl (S) and guaiacyl (G) units together and promote the formation of stable water-bridged dimeric complexes (WBDCs): S⋯G and S⋯S, in native lignin. The current understanding of how each type of interaction influences the stability of these complexes within lignin native cell walls is still limited. Here, we found by DFT calculations that hydrogen bonding is more dominant than π-stacking interaction between aromatic rings of WBDCs. Although there is a stronger interaction of hydrogen bonds between subunits and water and higher π-stacking interaction in the S⋯S complex compared to the S⋯G complex, the former complex is less thermodynamically stable than the latter due to the entropic contribution coming from the methoxy substituents in the S-unit. Our results demonstrate that the methoxylation degree of lignin units does not significantly influence the structural geometries of WBDCs; if anything, an enhanced dispersion interaction between ring aromatics results in quasi-sandwich geometries as found in "coiled" lignin structures in the xylem tissue of wood. In the same way as that with ionic liquids, polar solvents can dissolve S-lignin by favorable interactions with the aliphatic hydroxyl group in the α-position as the key site or the aromatic hydroxyl group as the secondary site.

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