Issue 3, 2020

Photochemical evolution of hydrogen peroxide on lignins

Abstract

Means of sustainable on-demand hydrogen peroxide production are sought after for numerous industrial, agricultural, and environmental applications. Herein we present the capacity of lignin and lignin sulfonate to behave as photocatalysts that upon irradiation reduce oxygen to hydrogen peroxide. Water-soluble lignin sulfonate acts as a homogeneous photocatalyst in solution, while lignin in thin-film form behaves as a heterogenous photocatalyst. In both cases, the photochemical cycle is closed via the oxidation of electron donors in solution, a process which competes with the autooxidation of lignin. Therefore, lignins can be destructively photooxidized to produce hydrogen peroxide as well as photochemically oxidizing low-oxidation potential species. These findings enable new photochemistry applications with abundant biopolymers and inform the growing body of knowledge on photochemical evolution of hydrogen peroxide.

Graphical abstract: Photochemical evolution of hydrogen peroxide on lignins

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
18 Dec 2019
Accepted
21 Jan 2020
First published
21 Jan 2020
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Green Chem., 2020,22, 673-677

Photochemical evolution of hydrogen peroxide on lignins

E. Miglbauer, M. Gryszel and E. D. Głowacki, Green Chem., 2020, 22, 673 DOI: 10.1039/C9GC04324A

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