3.8 Article

Lipid formation by aqueous Fischer-Tropsch-type synthesis over a temperature range of 100 to 400 °C

Journal

ORIGINS OF LIFE AND EVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE
Volume 31, Issue 1-2, Pages 103-118

Publisher

KLUWER ACADEMIC PUBL
DOI: 10.1023/A:1006702503954

Keywords

aqueous Fischer-Tropsch-type synthesis; lipids; n-alkanols; n-alkanoic acids; n-alkyl formates; oxalic acrid

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The formation of lipid compounds during an aqueous Fischer-Tropsch-type reaction was studied with solutions of oxalic acid as the carbon and hydrogen source. The reactions were conducted in stainless steel vessels by heating the oxalic acid solution at discrete temperatures from 100 to 400 degreesC, at intervals of 50 degreesC for two days each. The maximum lipid yield, especially for oxygenated compounds, is in the window of 150-250 degreesC. At a temperature of 100 degreesC only a trace amount of lipids was detected. At temperatures above 150 degreesC the lipid components ranged from C-12 to >C-33 and included n-alkanols, n-alkanoic acids, n-alkyl formates, n-alkanals, n-alkanones, n-alkanes, and n-alkenes, all with essentially no carbon number preference. The n-alkanes increased in concentration over the oxygenated compounds at temperatures of 200 degreesC and above, with a slight reduction in their carbon number ranges due to cracking. It was also noted that the n-alkanoic acids increased while n-alkanols decreased with increasing temperature above 200 OC. At temperatures above 300 degreesC synthesis competes with cracking and reforming reactions. At 400 OC significant cracking was observed and polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons and their alkylated homologs were detected. The results of this work suggest that the formation of lipid compounds by aqueous FTT reactions proceeds by insertion of a CO group at the terminal end of a carboxylic acid functionality to form n-oxoalkanoic acids, followed by reduction to n-alkanoic acids, to n-alkanals, then to n-alkanols. The n-alkenes are intermediate homologs for n-alkan-2-ones and Iz-alkanes. This proposed mechanism for aqueous FTT synthesis differs from the surface-catalyzed stepwise FT process (i.e., gaseous) of polymerization of methylene reported in the literature.

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