Selective C(aryl)-O bond cleavage in biorenewable phenolics

Biorefining of lignocellulosic biomass via a lignin first approach delivers a range of products with high oxygen content. Besides pulp, a lignin oil rich in guaiacols and syringols is obtained bearing multiple C(aryl)-OH and C(aryl)-OMe groups, typically named phenolics. Similarly, technical lignin...

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Published inChemical Society reviews Vol. 53; no. 11; pp. 5489 - 5551
Main Authors De Smet, Gilles, Bai, Xingfeng, Maes, Bert U. W
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Royal Society of Chemistry 04.06.2024
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Summary:Biorefining of lignocellulosic biomass via a lignin first approach delivers a range of products with high oxygen content. Besides pulp, a lignin oil rich in guaiacols and syringols is obtained bearing multiple C(aryl)-OH and C(aryl)-OMe groups, typically named phenolics. Similarly, technical lignin can be used but is generally more difficult to process providing lower yields of monomers. Removal of the hydroxy and methoxy groups in these oxygenated arenes is challenging due to the inherently strong C-O bonds, in addition to the steric and electronic deactivation by adjacent -OH or -OMe groups. Moreover, chemoselective removal of a specific group in the presence of other similar functionalities is non-trivial. Other side-reactions such as ring saturation and transalkylation further complicate the desired reduction process. In this overview, three different selective reduction reactions are considered. Complete hydrodeoxygenation removes both hydroxy and methoxy groups resulting in benzene and alkylated derivatives (BTX type products) which is often complicated by overreduction of the arene ring. Hydrodemethoxylation selectively removes methoxy groups in the presence of hydroxy groups leading to phenol products, while hydrodehydroxylation only removes hydroxy groups without cleavage of methoxy groups giving anisole products. Instead of defunctionalization via reduction transformation of C(aryl)-OH, albeit via an initial derivatization into C(aryl)-OX, into other functionalities is possible and also discussed. In addition to methods applying guaiacols and syringols present in lignin oil as model substrates, special attention is given to methods using mixtures of these compounds obtained from wood/technical lignin. Finally, other important aspects of C-O bond activation with respect to green chemistry are discussed. Selective removal of the hydroxy, methoxy or both groups in biorenewable oxygenated arenes (derived from lignin depolymerization) provides, respectively, anisoles, phenols and benzenes.
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Xingfeng Bai obtained his PhD in 2017 under the joint guidance of Prof. Chungu Xia from Lanzhou Institute of Chemical Physics (LICP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and Prof. Liwen Xu from Hangzhou Normal University. He worked as a junior researcher in LICP (2017-2018) and as a postdoctoral fellow in Prof. Yixin Lu's group at the National University of Singapore (2018-2020). He joined Prof. Bert Maes's group at the University of Antwerp in Oct 2020 and later was awarded an EU Marie-Curie postdoctoral fellowship (2021). His research interests include asymmetric synthesis & catalysis, and valorization of bio-based chemicals.
Bert U. W. Maes obtained his PhD at UAntwerp and subsequently received a Postdoctoral Fellowship of the Research Foundation in Belgium (FWO - Flanders). He worked at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in Budapest (G. Hajós) and at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris (A. Jutand). In 2003, Maes was appointed Assistant Professor in the Department of Chemistry at UAntwerp. Currently, he is a Full Professor and spokesman of the Antwerp Center of Excellence CASCH. In 2019, he was awarded a Collen-Francqui Research Professorship by the Francqui Foundation. His research interests cover the fields of organic synthesis, heterocyclic chemistry, catalysis, and sustainable chemistry. Maes is an editor of Topics in Heterocyclic Chemistry and an editorial advisory board member of SynOpen, Advances in Heterocyclic Chemistry and ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering.
based chemistry.
Gilles De Smet studied industrial engineering technology at KU Leuven. In 2023, he obtained a joint PhD in chemistry from the University of Antwerp and Université Libre de Bruxelles, under joint guidance of Prof. Bert Maes and Prof. Gwilherm Evano, working on transition metal catalyzed transformations of biomass as part of an Excellence of Science (EOS) project funded by FWO/FNRS. Afterwards, he moved to an industry position as R&D scientist at Oleon. His research interests include valorization of biorenewable chemicals, homogeneous and heterogeneous transition metal catalysis and CO
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ISSN:0306-0012
1460-4744
DOI:10.1039/d3cs00570d