Polymers, Vol. 16, Pages 3552: Atomistic Simulations of Mechanical Properties of Lignin

Fecha de publicación: 19/12/2024
Fuente: Polymers
Polymers, Vol. 16, Pages 3552: Atomistic Simulations of Mechanical Properties of Lignin
Polymers doi: 10.3390/polym16243552
Authors:
Siteng Zhang
Yishayah Bension
Michael Shimizu
Ting Ge

The mechanical properties of lignin, an aromatic heteropolymer constituting 20–30% plant biomass, are important to the fabrication and processing of lignin-based sustainable polymeric materials. In this study, atomistic simulations are performed to provide microscopic insights into the mechanics of lignin. Representative samples of miscanthus, spruce, and birch lignin are studied. At room temperature below the glass transition temperature, the stress–strain curves for uniaxial compression and tensile loading are calculated and analyzed. The results show that lignin possesses rigidity with a Young’s modulus in the order of GPa and exhibits strain hardening under strong compression. Meanwhile, lignin is brittle and fails through the microscopic mechanism of cavitation and chain pullout under local tensile loading. In addition to the three common lignin samples, minimalist model systems of monodisperse linear chains consisting of only guaiacyl units and β-O-4 linkages are simulated. Systematic variation of the model lignin chain length allows a focused examination of the molecular weight effects. The results show that the molecular weight does not affect the Young’s modulus much, but higher molecular weight results in stronger strain hardening under compression. In the range of molecular weight studied, the lignin chains are not long enough to arrest the catastrophic chain pullout, explaining the brittleness of real lignin samples. This work demonstrates that the recently modified CHARMM force fields and the accompanying structural information of real lignin samples properly capture the mechanics of lignin, offering an in silico microscope to explore the atomistic details necessary for the valorizaiton of lignin.