posted on 2025-03-04, 07:26authored byAnand Narani, Yu Gao, Jialiang Zhang, Connor A. Beach, Marcus Foston
Lignin depolymerization yields a complex mixture of monomeric
products,
including a wide range of highly oxygenated molecules. Quantifying
these lignin monomers using existing gas chromatography (GC) with
a flame ionization detector and effective carbon number methods is
highly challenging due to the response variability for molecules containing
heteroatoms and the inability to quantify unknown monomers. In this
work, we demonstrate the potential of a GC equipped with dual detectors,
a modified flame ionization detector (FID) for quantitative carbon
detection (Polyarc reactor) and a mass spectrometer (GC-QCD/MS) for
identifying and quantifying lignin monomers without the use of standards.
Lignin depolymerization products were generated from Organosolv poplar
lignin and poplar biomass through methods such as hydrogenolysis,
solvolysis, and reductive catalytic fractionation. In the GC-QCD/MS,
the QCD component converts all organic molecules into methane before
quantification via FID, providing nearly uniform response factors
for diverse compounds found within the sample, while a flow splitter
directs a portion of the sample to the mass spectrometer for simultaneous
molecular identification. This setup enables cost-effective, flexible,
and streamlined measurements of lignin monomer carbon yields without
the need for standards. Additionally, GC-QCD/MS supports the quantification
of unidentified compounds within the lignin product mixture.