Summary
Hexavalent chromium solutions at two pH levels (about 1.3 and 7.8) were reacted with wood, gum ghatti, lignin, cellulose and simple model compounds representing wood chemical structures (guaiacol, vanillin, vanillyl alcohol, homovanillyl alcohol, methyl-(β-D-glucoside, and methyl-β-cellobioside). Reaction products were isolated and characterised by elemental analysis, magnetic susceptibility, and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). Data suggest that all the chromium present in the reaction products is in its trivalent oxidation state. After reduction reactions, wood and macromolecular substances generally fixed a relatively low level of chromium, which contrasts with the high level in the products isolated from the reaction with the model compounds. It appears that the reaction of the simple model compounds with Cr(VI) did not produce complex adducts of Cr(III) but inorganic substances, of the hydrated chromium oxide type. Therefore, under the experimental conditions applied, simple model compounds do not seem to behave chemically as wood or as the macromolecular substances investigated. Hence, their significance as model compounds must be object of further assessment. An exception is the product from the reaction of vanillyl alcohol and K2CrO4 aq. This contains a relatively small amount of chromium and its FTIR spectrum presents rather well defined bands indicating reaction of the phenolic hydroxyl and secondary alcohol groups. This system must be worthy of further investigation as a model for lignin.
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Received 13 June 1997
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Jorge, F., Santos, T., de Jesus, J. et al. Reactions between Cr(VI) and wood and its model compounds . Wood Science and Technology 33, 501–517 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002260050133
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002260050133