Abstract

Pretreatment of biomass before subjecting it to enzyme saccharification is crucial with regards to facilitating access of enzyme to biomass. Extrusion, as a continuous and cost-effective pretreatment method, combines heating with high shear and mixing opening cell walls at the microscopic scale, thus largely increasing the specific surface area (SSA) of biomass for enzyme adsorption. The objective of this study was to examine the effect of extrusion as a pretreatment method and the underlying factors ruling the improvement of sugar yields. The optimum glucose, xylose, and combined sugar recoveries were 48.79%, 24.98%, and 40.07%, respectively, at 27.5% moisture content and 80 rpm screw speed. These yields were 2.2, 6.6, and 2.6 times higher than those for untreated corn stover. X-ray diffraction analysis showed that the crystallinity index was not a good indicator of sugar yield. However, scanning electron microscopy showed that the cellulose network was exposed due to the destruction of the lignin sheath. The Langmuir adsorption model was shown to be an effective tool for the estimation of the SSA of corn stover. The SSA of pretreated samples was significantly amplified over the control, revealing that extrusion can open the cell wall at the microscopic scale, which was especially favorable on sugar yields.

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