Progress in Organosolv and Steam Explosion Pretreatments of Oil Palm Fibers for Biomacromolecules Extraction

Plant fibers are excellent sources of biomacromolecules, but the extraction of these chemicals critically depends on pretreatments on the biomass. In this work, steam explosion followed by acetosolv or ethanosolv pulping were evaluated as pretreatments for cellulose nanocrystal and lignin extraction...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nágila F. Souza, Jéssica S. Almeida, José A. Pinheiro, Paulo H. F. Pereira, João P. Saraiva Morais, Cléa B. Figueirêdo, Henriette M.C. Azeredo, Renato C. Leitão, Morsyleide de F. Rosa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2022-11-01
Series:Journal of Natural Fibers
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15440478.2021.2002763
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Summary:Plant fibers are excellent sources of biomacromolecules, but the extraction of these chemicals critically depends on pretreatments on the biomass. In this work, steam explosion followed by acetosolv or ethanosolv pulping were evaluated as pretreatments for cellulose nanocrystal and lignin extraction from oil palm mesocarp fibers. The steam explosion improves defibrillation of the biomass, deconstructs lignocellulosic material, facilitating the separation between lignin and polysaccharides by organosolv pulping. The effects of acetic acid or sodium hydroxide concentrations and reaction time for acetosolv or ethanosolv pulping were evaluated by a central composite design. Fibers and biomacromolecules were characterized using analytical methods, including SEM, TEM, DRX, zeta potential, and FTIR. The optimized conditions to obtain cellulose nanocrystals from bleached acetosolv fibers (CNCA) were 80% (w/w) acetic acid catalyzed with HCl 0.6% (w/w) for 35 min, while the optimized conditions from ethanosolv fibers (CNCE) were NaOH 4% (w/v) and ethanol 95% (v/v) for 60 min. The lignins obtained from both optimized conditions presented high purity. The acetosolv delignification was more effective to extract the insoluble lignin (yield of 36.7%) than ethanosolv (yield of 23.2%). The CNCA and CNCE presented, respectively, high crystallinity (68% and 56%) and good aspect ratio (26 and 25).
ISSN:1544-0478
1544-046X