Issue 14, 2006

Functional dependency of structures of ionic liquids: do substituents govern the selectivity of enzymatic glycerolysis?

Abstract

The concept of regulating the preference of a reversible multi-step reaction by adjusting the substituents of ionic liquids (ILs) has been successfully exemplified with a group of tetraammonium-based ionic liquids as medium for the enzymatic glycerolysis. Simultaneous existence of long chain hydrophobic substituents and hydrophilic ethoxyl or hydroxyl moieties is found, respectively, to be essential for triglycerides (TG) dissolving and equilibrium shifting. The reactions in the ILs with cations consisting of long chain and free hydroxyl groups gave markedly higher conversion of TG and better preference to monoglyceride formation. Interestingly the predicted results from COSMO-RS (a quantum chemical model programme) achieved a good agreement with the experimental data, mapping out the specific solvation from the ILs as well as demonstrating the interaction between ILs, substrates and products being the intrinsic causes that govern reaction evolution and direct equilibrium shifting.

Graphical abstract: Functional dependency of structures of ionic liquids: do substituents govern the selectivity of enzymatic glycerolysis?

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
16 May 2006
Accepted
01 Jun 2006
First published
16 Jun 2006

Org. Biomol. Chem., 2006,4, 2772-2776

Functional dependency of structures of ionic liquids: do substituents govern the selectivity of enzymatic glycerolysis?

Z. Guo, B. Chen, R. López Murillo, T. Tan and X. Xu, Org. Biomol. Chem., 2006, 4, 2772 DOI: 10.1039/B606900B

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