Abstract

BackgroundPopulus (poplar) tree species including hybrid varieties are considered as promising biomass feedstock for biofuels and biochemicals production due to their fast growing, short vegetative cycle, and widely distribution. In this work, poplar was pretreated with acetic acid (AC) to produce xylooligosaccharides (XOS), and hydrogen peroxide–acetic acid (HPAC) was used to remove residual lignin in AC-pretreated poplar for enzymatic hydrolysis. The aim of this work is to produce XOS and monosaccharides from poplar by a two-step pretreatment method.ResultsThe optimal conditions for the AC pretreatment were 170 °C, 5% AC, and 30 min, giving a XOS yield of 55.8%. The optimal HPAC pretreatment conditions were 60 °C, 2 h, and 80% HPAC, resulting in 92.7% delignification and 87.8% cellulose retention in the AC-pretreated poplar. The two step-treated poplar presented 86.6% glucose yield and 89.0% xylose yield by enzymatic hydrolysis with a cellulases loading of 7.2 m/g dry mass. Very high glucose (93.8%) and xylose (94.6%) yields were obtained with 14.3 mg cellulases/g dry mass. Both Tween 80 and β-glucosidase enhanced glucose yield of HPAC-pretreated poplar by alleviating the accumulation of cellobiose. Under the optimal conditions, 6.9 g XOS, 40.3 g glucose, and 8.9 g xylose were produced from 100 g poplar.ConclusionsThe AC and HPAC pretreatment of poplar represented an efficient strategy to produce XOS and fermentable sugars with high yields. This two-step pretreatment was a recyclable benign and advantageous scheme for biorefinery of the poplar into XOS and monosaccharides.

Highlights

  • Populus tree species including hybrid varieties are considered as promising biomass feedstock for biofuels and biochemicals production due to their fast growing, short vegetative cycle, and widely distribution

  • AC pretreatment Component analysis of AC‐pretreated poplar In the pretreatment of poplar with water for 10, 30, and 50 min, the xylan content decreased from 17.4% to 16.5%, 11.0%, and 8.4%, respectively (Table 1)

  • When the AC concentration was less than 5%, very high glucan retention (> 93%) was observed and the contents of glucan and lignin increased due to the removal of xylan by AC pretreatment

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Summary

Introduction

Populus (poplar) tree species including hybrid varieties are considered as promising biomass feedstock for biofuels and biochemicals production due to their fast growing, short vegetative cycle, and widely distribution. Poplar was pretreated with acetic acid (AC) to produce xylooligosaccharides (XOS), and hydrogen peroxide–acetic acid (HPAC) was used to remove residual lignin in AC-pretreated poplar for enzymatic hydrolysis. Enzymatic hydrolysis of poplar for the production of fermentable sugars, a key step for biofuels and biochemicals production, has been extensively investigated and different. Wen et al Biotechnol Biofuels (2019) 12:87 xylooligosaccharides and fermentable sugars from lignocellulosic materials by autohydrolysis, alkaline, and acid pretreatments has been reported [11,12,13,14,15,16]. It is necessary to probe an effective method to alleviate lignin inhibition or to remove lignin to increase cellulases accessibility to cellulose in AC-pretreated poplar

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