Stepwise pretreatment involving dilute acid and amine for corn stover fractionation toward full lignocellulose-oriented valorization
Abstract
Lignocellulose valorization is interwoven with fractionation, and by tuning the pretreatment setup and conditions, the characteristics of both polysaccharides and lignin could be tailored to befit the upgrading demands. Here, a stepwise pretreatment approach involves dilute acid and amine was developed for corn stover fractionation. Under the optimized prehydrolysis conditions (3 % H2SO4, 120 oC and 2 h), up to ~ 97.8 % of original xylan was released in the form of xylose, along with a negligible amount of furfural. The signal patterns of confocal laser scanning microscopy revealed that the removal of hemicellulose caused lignin redistribution within the cell wall. At high biomass loading (58 %, w/w), the amine pretreatment extracted up to ~ 82 % of lignin with abundant β-O-4 linkages(37-41/100Ar), and strong fluorescence (Turquoise and light blue). Enzymatic hydrolysis of mechanochemical pretreated cellulose (MCC) and thermochemical pretreated cellulose (TCC) resulted in the glucan conversion of 96.1 and 92.8 %, respectively, at 30 mg Cellic® CTec3 HS/g for 72 h. Furthermore, the mass balance demonstrated that the combined dilute acid-amine pretreatment could potentially be the efficient fractionation method of lignocellulose. Moreover, a mechanistic understanding of the interactions between lignocellulose components and pretreatment solvents was described. Overall, this pretreatment approach offers the right balance between fractionation of all lignocellulose constituents and preservation of their structural integrity, while at the same time opening a window for lignin functionalization and depolymerization.