Design rules for environmental biodegradability of phenylalanine alkyl ester linked ionic liquids

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Standard

Design rules for environmental biodegradability of phenylalanine alkyl ester linked ionic liquids. / Suk, Morten; Haiß, Annette; Westphal, Janin et al.
in: Green Chemistry , Jahrgang 22, Nr. 14, 21.07.2020, S. 4498-4508.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Harvard

Suk, M, Haiß, A, Westphal, J, Jordan, A, Kellett, A, Kapitanov, IV, Karpichev, Y, Gathergood, N & Kümmerer, K 2020, 'Design rules for environmental biodegradability of phenylalanine alkyl ester linked ionic liquids', Green Chemistry , Jg. 22, Nr. 14, S. 4498-4508. https://doi.org/10.1039/d0gc00918k

APA

Vancouver

Suk M, Haiß A, Westphal J, Jordan A, Kellett A, Kapitanov IV et al. Design rules for environmental biodegradability of phenylalanine alkyl ester linked ionic liquids. Green Chemistry . 2020 Jul 21;22(14):4498-4508. doi: 10.1039/d0gc00918k

Bibtex

@article{14e2f3e8b17b4428961c944e577a55f6,
title = "Design rules for environmental biodegradability of phenylalanine alkyl ester linked ionic liquids",
abstract = "Ionic liquids (ILs) are perceived as a promising group of chemicals within the realm of green chemistry. They are increasingly of interest for open environmental applications. Rules for the design of biodegradable and preferably completely mineralizing ILs after their introduction into the environment are highly desirable. In this study, the impact of the length of the alkyl chain and of the cationic head group on the environmental biodegradability of l-phenylalanine ester (PheCn) derived ILs using the pyridinium (PyPheCn), imidazolium (ImPheCn) and cholinium (CholPheCn) head groups was systematically studied. This included high-resolution mass spectrometry monitoring of formed products of incomplete mineralization. Completely biodegradable ILs were only identified in the PyPheCn series. PyPheC2 and PyPheC4 were fully mineralizable within 42 days with no detectable transformation products (TPs), whereas mineralization of longer chain length PyPheCn ILs required more time. Our results show biodegradation by microorganisms was affected by an alkyl chain length of at least 10 carbon atoms. Biodegradation of the ILs started with biotic ester hydrolysis independent of the alkyl chain length or core scaffold. In contrast, the second step of microbial degradation was an amide bond cleavage which was only shown for ILs with a pyridinium or imidazolium core, even after a test prolongation up to 42 days. Hence, the nature of the cationic head group and the chain length impacted on the mineralization and biodegradability of the ILs. For ILs with an imidazolium core, amide bond cleavage resulted in the formation of recalcitrant 1-carboxymethylimidazolium (ImAc). Whereas for most ILs with a pyridinium core, amide bond cleavage resulted in 1-carboxymethylpyridinium (PyAc) which was mineralizable, although not readily biodegradable according to the test guideline 301D. In the case of cholinium ILs, no further degradation of cholinium phenylalanine amide TP was observed after the hydrolysis of the ester to the alkyl alcohol. The biodegradability of ILs decreased in the order PyPheCn > ImPheCn > CholPheCn, but a key finding is that ImPhe is degraded to ImAc but not further (cf. favourable PyAc mineralisation). These results can be used to design ILs with the property to be effectively biodegraded and mineralized in the environment.",
keywords = "Chemistry",
author = "Morten Suk and Annette Hai{\ss} and Janin Westphal and Andrew Jordan and Andrew Kellett and Kapitanov, {Illia V.} and Yevgen Karpichev and Nicholas Gathergood and Klaus K{\"u}mmerer",
year = "2020",
month = jul,
day = "21",
doi = "10.1039/d0gc00918k",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
pages = "4498--4508",
journal = "Green Chemistry ",
issn = "1463-9262",
publisher = "Royal Society of Chemistry",
number = "14",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Design rules for environmental biodegradability of phenylalanine alkyl ester linked ionic liquids

AU - Suk, Morten

AU - Haiß, Annette

AU - Westphal, Janin

AU - Jordan, Andrew

AU - Kellett, Andrew

AU - Kapitanov, Illia V.

AU - Karpichev, Yevgen

AU - Gathergood, Nicholas

AU - Kümmerer, Klaus

PY - 2020/7/21

Y1 - 2020/7/21

N2 - Ionic liquids (ILs) are perceived as a promising group of chemicals within the realm of green chemistry. They are increasingly of interest for open environmental applications. Rules for the design of biodegradable and preferably completely mineralizing ILs after their introduction into the environment are highly desirable. In this study, the impact of the length of the alkyl chain and of the cationic head group on the environmental biodegradability of l-phenylalanine ester (PheCn) derived ILs using the pyridinium (PyPheCn), imidazolium (ImPheCn) and cholinium (CholPheCn) head groups was systematically studied. This included high-resolution mass spectrometry monitoring of formed products of incomplete mineralization. Completely biodegradable ILs were only identified in the PyPheCn series. PyPheC2 and PyPheC4 were fully mineralizable within 42 days with no detectable transformation products (TPs), whereas mineralization of longer chain length PyPheCn ILs required more time. Our results show biodegradation by microorganisms was affected by an alkyl chain length of at least 10 carbon atoms. Biodegradation of the ILs started with biotic ester hydrolysis independent of the alkyl chain length or core scaffold. In contrast, the second step of microbial degradation was an amide bond cleavage which was only shown for ILs with a pyridinium or imidazolium core, even after a test prolongation up to 42 days. Hence, the nature of the cationic head group and the chain length impacted on the mineralization and biodegradability of the ILs. For ILs with an imidazolium core, amide bond cleavage resulted in the formation of recalcitrant 1-carboxymethylimidazolium (ImAc). Whereas for most ILs with a pyridinium core, amide bond cleavage resulted in 1-carboxymethylpyridinium (PyAc) which was mineralizable, although not readily biodegradable according to the test guideline 301D. In the case of cholinium ILs, no further degradation of cholinium phenylalanine amide TP was observed after the hydrolysis of the ester to the alkyl alcohol. The biodegradability of ILs decreased in the order PyPheCn > ImPheCn > CholPheCn, but a key finding is that ImPhe is degraded to ImAc but not further (cf. favourable PyAc mineralisation). These results can be used to design ILs with the property to be effectively biodegraded and mineralized in the environment.

AB - Ionic liquids (ILs) are perceived as a promising group of chemicals within the realm of green chemistry. They are increasingly of interest for open environmental applications. Rules for the design of biodegradable and preferably completely mineralizing ILs after their introduction into the environment are highly desirable. In this study, the impact of the length of the alkyl chain and of the cationic head group on the environmental biodegradability of l-phenylalanine ester (PheCn) derived ILs using the pyridinium (PyPheCn), imidazolium (ImPheCn) and cholinium (CholPheCn) head groups was systematically studied. This included high-resolution mass spectrometry monitoring of formed products of incomplete mineralization. Completely biodegradable ILs were only identified in the PyPheCn series. PyPheC2 and PyPheC4 were fully mineralizable within 42 days with no detectable transformation products (TPs), whereas mineralization of longer chain length PyPheCn ILs required more time. Our results show biodegradation by microorganisms was affected by an alkyl chain length of at least 10 carbon atoms. Biodegradation of the ILs started with biotic ester hydrolysis independent of the alkyl chain length or core scaffold. In contrast, the second step of microbial degradation was an amide bond cleavage which was only shown for ILs with a pyridinium or imidazolium core, even after a test prolongation up to 42 days. Hence, the nature of the cationic head group and the chain length impacted on the mineralization and biodegradability of the ILs. For ILs with an imidazolium core, amide bond cleavage resulted in the formation of recalcitrant 1-carboxymethylimidazolium (ImAc). Whereas for most ILs with a pyridinium core, amide bond cleavage resulted in 1-carboxymethylpyridinium (PyAc) which was mineralizable, although not readily biodegradable according to the test guideline 301D. In the case of cholinium ILs, no further degradation of cholinium phenylalanine amide TP was observed after the hydrolysis of the ester to the alkyl alcohol. The biodegradability of ILs decreased in the order PyPheCn > ImPheCn > CholPheCn, but a key finding is that ImPhe is degraded to ImAc but not further (cf. favourable PyAc mineralisation). These results can be used to design ILs with the property to be effectively biodegraded and mineralized in the environment.

KW - Chemistry

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85089075773&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1039/d0gc00918k

DO - 10.1039/d0gc00918k

M3 - Journal articles

AN - SCOPUS:85089075773

VL - 22

SP - 4498

EP - 4508

JO - Green Chemistry

JF - Green Chemistry

SN - 1463-9262

IS - 14

ER -

DOI