Abstract

Dissolution of lignocellulose in ionic liquids is a promising route to synthesizing fuels and chemical feedstocks from woody plant materials. While cellulose dissolution is well-understood, less is known about the differences between ionic liquids' interactions with cellulose vs. lignin. This work uses dispersion-corrected density functional theory (DFT-D) to model the interactions of imidazolium chloride ionic liquid anions and cations with (1,4)-dimethoxy-β-D-glucopyranose and 1-(4-methoxyphenyl)-2-methoxyethanol as models for cellulose and the lignin polyphenol, respectively. The cellulose model preferentially interacts with Cl(-), confirming previous experimental and theoretical studies. However, the lignin model has significant π-stacking and hydrogen bonding interactions with imidazolium cation. These results are robust to changes in the computational details, and suggest that the ionic liquid cations play important roles in tuning the relative solubilities of lignin and cellulose. Calculations predict that the extended π-systems of benzimidazolium ionic liquids yield stronger interactions with lignin, showing potential for improved lignocellulose solvents.

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