4.8 Article

Synthesis of Levulinic Acids From Muconic Acids in Hot Water

Journal

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/anie.202309597

Keywords

Green Chemistry; Levulinic Acids; Lignin; Muconic Acids; Renewable Resources

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A selective method of producing levulinic acid, a key biorenewable platform molecule, has been developed from muconic acid through high-temperature water heating. This method offers the possibility of synthesizing novel levulinic acid derivatives and demonstrates superior performance as a plasticizer in comparison to commercial benchmarks.
Levulinic acid is a key biorenewable platform molecule. Its current chemical production from sugars is plagued by limited yields, char formation and difficult separations. An alternative and selective route starting from muconic acid via simple heating in water at high temperature (180 degrees C) has been developed. Muconic acid can be obtained from sugars or catechol fermentation. Chemical oxidation of catechol is another possibility which advantageously can also be applied on substituted catechols, hereby providing substituted muconic acids. When applying the disclosed hydrothermal protocol on these substrates hitherto unknown substituted levulinic acids were accessed. In particular, 3-propyllevulinic acid has been synthesized from 4-propylcatechol, prepared from pine wood. This propylated derivative has been used for the synthesis of a 3-propyllevulinate diester, i.e. butane-1,4-diyl bis(4-oxo-3-propylpentanoate), via esterification with 1,4-butanediol. The diester showed superior performance as plasticizer in comparison to the corresponding levulinate diester in both PVC (polyvinyl chloride) and PLA (polylactic acid). It plasticizes equally effective as the notorious commercial phthalate-based benchmark DEHP (di-2-ethylhexyl phthalate) in PVC.

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