Transformation of Cellulose and its Derived Carbohydrates into Formic and Lactic Acids Catalyzed by Vanadyl Cations

The transformation of cellulose or cellulose‐derived carbohydrates into platform chemicals is the key to establish biomass‐based sustainable chemical processes. The systems able to catalyze the conversion of cellulose into key chemicals in water without the consumption of hydrogen are limited. We re...

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Veröffentlicht in:ChemSusChem 2014-06, Vol.7 (6), p.1557-1567
Hauptverfasser: Tang, Zhenchen, Deng, Weiping, Wang, Yanliang, Zhu, Enze, Wan, Xiaoyue, Zhang, Qinghong, Wang, Ye
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container_end_page 1567
container_issue 6
container_start_page 1557
container_title ChemSusChem
container_volume 7
creator Tang, Zhenchen
Deng, Weiping
Wang, Yanliang
Zhu, Enze
Wan, Xiaoyue
Zhang, Qinghong
Wang, Ye
description The transformation of cellulose or cellulose‐derived carbohydrates into platform chemicals is the key to establish biomass‐based sustainable chemical processes. The systems able to catalyze the conversion of cellulose into key chemicals in water without the consumption of hydrogen are limited. We report that simple vanadyl (VO2+) cations catalyze the conversions of cellulose and its monomer, glucose, into lactic acid and formic acid in water. We have discovered an interesting shift of the major product from formic acid to lactic acid on switching the reaction atmosphere from oxygen to nitrogen. Our studies suggest that VO2+ catalyzes the isomerization of glucose to fructose, the retro‐aldol fragmentation of fructose to two trioses, and the isomerization of trioses, which leads to the formation of lactic acid under anaerobic conditions. The oxidative cleavage of CC bonds in the intermediates caused by the redox conversion of VO2+/VO2+ under aerobic conditions results in formic acid and CO2. We demonstrate that the addition of an alcohol suppresses the formation of CO2 and enhances the formic acid yield significantly to 70–75 %. Two birds with one stone: A shift of the major product from formic acid to lactic acid is observed on switching the reaction atmosphere from O2 to N2 during cellulose or glucose conversions catalyzed by vanadyl cations. Glucose is first isomerized into fructose, which undergoes retro‐aldol fragmentation to form two trioses, which produce lactic and formic acid.
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The systems able to catalyze the conversion of cellulose into key chemicals in water without the consumption of hydrogen are limited. We report that simple vanadyl (VO2+) cations catalyze the conversions of cellulose and its monomer, glucose, into lactic acid and formic acid in water. We have discovered an interesting shift of the major product from formic acid to lactic acid on switching the reaction atmosphere from oxygen to nitrogen. Our studies suggest that VO2+ catalyzes the isomerization of glucose to fructose, the retro‐aldol fragmentation of fructose to two trioses, and the isomerization of trioses, which leads to the formation of lactic acid under anaerobic conditions. The oxidative cleavage of CC bonds in the intermediates caused by the redox conversion of VO2+/VO2+ under aerobic conditions results in formic acid and CO2. We demonstrate that the addition of an alcohol suppresses the formation of CO2 and enhances the formic acid yield significantly to 70–75 %. Two birds with one stone: A shift of the major product from formic acid to lactic acid is observed on switching the reaction atmosphere from O2 to N2 during cellulose or glucose conversions catalyzed by vanadyl cations. 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Two birds with one stone: A shift of the major product from formic acid to lactic acid is observed on switching the reaction atmosphere from O2 to N2 during cellulose or glucose conversions catalyzed by vanadyl cations. 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subjects Acids
biomass
Carbohydrates
Catalysis
Cellulose
Cellulose - chemistry
Formates - chemistry
Glucose - chemistry
homogeneous catalysis
Lactic Acid - chemistry
Oxygen - chemistry
reaction mechanisms
vanadium
Vanadium Compounds - chemistry
title Transformation of Cellulose and its Derived Carbohydrates into Formic and Lactic Acids Catalyzed by Vanadyl Cations
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