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Physical techniques shed light on the differences in sugarcane bagasse structure subjected to steam explosion pretreatments at equivalent combined severity factors

•Samples pretreated at equivalent CSFs showed significant physical and chemical differences.•CSF is not robust enough to fully predict the effects of the pretreatment.•Temperature in CSF-equivalent can be the key parameter for hydrolysis yields. Significant improvements in pretreatments and a deeper...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Industrial crops and products 2020-12, Vol.158, p.113003, Article 113003
Main Authors: Espirito Santo, Melissa C., Fockink, Douglas H., Pellegrini, Vanessa O.A., Guimaraes, Francisco E.G., deAzevedo, Eduardo R., Ramos, Luiz Pereira, Polikarpov, Igor
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•Samples pretreated at equivalent CSFs showed significant physical and chemical differences.•CSF is not robust enough to fully predict the effects of the pretreatment.•Temperature in CSF-equivalent can be the key parameter for hydrolysis yields. Significant improvements in pretreatments and a deeper understanding of changes in the physical structure and chemical composition of pretreated lignocellulosic materials are required to guarantee the technical and economic sustainability of second-generation ethanol technologies. In present work, several biophysical techniques were applied to characterize sugarcane bagasse samples that have been subjected to autocatalytic, phosphoric acid and sulfuric acid catalyzed steam explosion under equivalent combined severity factors (CSF). Confocal laser scanning microscopy and fluorescence lifetime imaging studies demonstrated unequal changes in lignin distribution in the plant cell wall that could be nicely correlated with substrate susceptibility to enzymatic hydrolysis. Furthermore, solid state nuclear magnetic resonance corroborated these observations by showing the differences in biomass composition primarily associated with hemicellulose removal, whereas X-ray diffraction analysis revealed changes in crystallinity indexes and average crystallite sizes. Thus, the impact of pretreatment temperature on the physical structure and chemical composition of CSF-equivalent steam-exploded sugarcane bagasse was identified as the key factor for developing substrate accessibility. This calls for caution in using combined severity factor as a chief parameter for comparison of different pretreatment conditions.
ISSN:0926-6690
1872-633X
DOI:10.1016/j.indcrop.2020.113003