Revisiting the Molar Mass and Conformation of Derivatized Fractionated Softwood Kraft Lignin.
Lun JiLi-Yang LiuMijung ChoMuzaffer A KaraaslanScott RenneckarPublished in: Biomacromolecules (2021)
The limited utilization of reliable tools and standards for determination of the softwood kraft lignin molar mass and the corresponding molecular conformation hampers elucidation of the structure-property relationships of lignin. At issue, conventional size exclusion chromatography (SEC) is unable to robustly measure the molar mass because of a lack of calibration standards with a similar structure to lignin. In the present work, the determination of the absolute molar mass of acetylated technical lignin was revisited utilizing SEC combined with multi-angle light scattering with a band pass filter to suppress the fluorescence. Fractionated lignin isolated using sequential techniques of solvent and membrane methods was used to enhance the clarity of light-scattering profiles by narrowing the molar mass distribution of lignin fractions. Further information on the molecular conformation of derivatized samples was studied utilizing a differential viscometer, and chemical structures were identified by NMR spectroscopy analysis. Through the help of fractionation, intrinsic viscosity values were determined for the different fractions as a function of molecular weight cut-off membranes. The derivatized acetone-soluble lignin was found to possess a lower molecular weight and an extremely compact structure relative to the derivatized acetone-insoluble fraction based on a significantly lower "α" value in the Mark-Houwink-Sakurada plot (0.15 acetone-soluble vs 0.33 acetone-insoluble). The differences in geometry were supported by the linkage analysis from NMR showing the acetone-soluble part containing fewer native linkages. In both of these examples, kraft lignin behaved like a solid sphere, limiting the ability to provide entanglements between molecular chains. From this standpoint, macroscopic properties of lignin are justified with this knowledge of a dense and extremely compact structure.