4.6 Article

Insights into Hydrogen Bonding and Stacking Interactions in Cellulose

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A
Volume 115, Issue 49, Pages 14191-14202

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp203620x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. LANL LDRD
  2. NABC
  3. CNLS
  4. DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center (DOE BER Office of Science) [DE-FC02-07ER64494]

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In this quantum chemical study, we explore hydrogen bonding (H-bonding) and stacking interactions in different crystalline cellulose allomorphs; namely, cellulose I-beta and cellulose III1. We consider a model system representing a cellulose crystalline core made from six cellobiose units arranged in three layers with two chains per layer. We calculate the contributions of intrasheet and intersheet interactions to the structure and stability in both cellulose I-beta and cellulose IIII crystalline cores. Reference structures for this study were generated from molecular dynamics simulations of water-solvated cellulose I-beta and IIII fibrils. A systematic analysis of various conformations describing different mutual orientations of cellobiose units is performed using the hybrid density functional theory with the M06-2X with 6-31+G(d,p) basis sets. We dissect the nature of the forces that stabilize the cellulose I-beta and cellulose IIII crystalline cores and quantify the relative strength of H-bonding and stacking interactions. Our calculations demonstrate that individual H-bonding interactions are stronger in cellulose I-beta than in cellulose IIII; however, the total H-bonding contribution to stabilization is larger in cellulose IIII because of the highly cooperative nature of the H-bonding network. In addition, we observe a significant contribution from cooperative stacking interactions to the stabilization of cellulose I-beta. The theory of atoms-in-molecules (AIM) has been employed to characterize and quantify these intermolecular interactions. AIM analyses highlight the role of nonconventional CH center dot center dot center dot O H-bonding in the cellulose assemblies. Finally, we calculate molecular electrostatic potential maps for the cellulose allomorphs that capture the differences in chemical reactivity of the systems considered in our study.

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