posted on 2021-05-19, 15:43authored byHomer
C. Genuino, Tim G. Meinds, J. O. P. Broekman, Marcel Staal, Jelle Brinksma, Thomas Wielema, Francesco Picchioni, Wesley R. Browne, Peter J. Deuss, Hero J. Heeres
Oxidized starch can
be efficiently prepared using H2O2 as an oxidant
and iron(III) tetrasulfophthalocyanine
(FePcS) as a catalyst, with properties in the same range as those
for commercial oxidized starches prepared using NaOCl. Herein, we
performed an in-depth study on the oxidation of potato starch focusing
on the mode of operation of this green catalytic system and its fate
as the reaction progresses. At optimum batch reaction conditions (H2O2/FePcS molar ratio of 6000, 50 °C, and pH
10), a high product yield (91 wt %) was obtained with substantial
degrees of substitution (DSCOOH of 1.4 and DSCO of 4.1 per 100 AGU) and significantly reduced viscosity (197 mPa·s)
by dosing H2O2. Model compound studies showed
limited activity of the catalyst for C6 oxidation, indicating that
carboxylic acid incorporation likely results from C–C bond
cleavage events. The influence of the process conditions on the stability
of the FePcS catalyst was studied using UV–vis and Raman spectroscopic
techniques, revealing that both increased H2O2 concentration and temperature promote the irreversible degradation
of the FePcS catalyst at high pH. The rate and extent of FePcS degradation
were found to strongly depend on the initial H2O2 concentration where also the rapid decomposition of H2O2 by FePcS occurs. These results explain why the slow
addition of H2O2 in combination with low FePcS
catalyst concentration is beneficial for the efficient application
in starch oxidation.