Cargando…

Alkalization of Kraft Pulps from Pine and Eucalyptus and Its Effect on Enzymatic Saccharification and Viscosity Control of Cellulose

Bleached kraft pulps from eucalyptus and pine were subjected to cold caustic extraction (CCE) with NaOH (5, 10, 17.5, and 35%) for hemicelluloses removal and to increase cellulose accessibility. The effect of these changes was evaluated in enzymatic saccharification with the multicomponent Cellic CT...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Carrillo-Varela, Isabel, Vidal, Claudia, Vidaurre, Sebastián, Parra, Carolina, Machuca, Ángela, Briones, Rodrigo, Mendonça, Regis Teixeira
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9370887/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35956642
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14153127
_version_ 1784766954070867968
author Carrillo-Varela, Isabel
Vidal, Claudia
Vidaurre, Sebastián
Parra, Carolina
Machuca, Ángela
Briones, Rodrigo
Mendonça, Regis Teixeira
author_facet Carrillo-Varela, Isabel
Vidal, Claudia
Vidaurre, Sebastián
Parra, Carolina
Machuca, Ángela
Briones, Rodrigo
Mendonça, Regis Teixeira
author_sort Carrillo-Varela, Isabel
collection PubMed
description Bleached kraft pulps from eucalyptus and pine were subjected to cold caustic extraction (CCE) with NaOH (5, 10, 17.5, and 35%) for hemicelluloses removal and to increase cellulose accessibility. The effect of these changes was evaluated in enzymatic saccharification with the multicomponent Cellic CTec3 enzyme cocktail, and in viscosity reduction of pulps with the monocomponent Trichoderma reesei endoglucanase (EG). After CCE with 10% NaOH (CCE10) and 17.5% NaOH (CCE17.5), hemicellulose content lower than 1% was achieved in eucalyptus and pine pulps, respectively. At these concentrations, cellulose I started to be converted into cellulose II. NaOH concentrations higher than 17.5% decreased the intrinsic viscosity (from 730 to 420 mL/g in eucalyptus and from 510 to 410 mL/g in pine). Cellulose crystallinity was reduced from 60% to 44% in eucalyptus and from 71% to 44% in pine, as the NaOH concentration increased. Enzymatic multicomponent saccharification showed higher glucose yields in all CCE-treated eucalyptus samples (up to 93%) while only CCE17.5 and CCE35 pine pulps achieved 90% after 40 h of incubation. Untreated bleached pulps of both species presented saccharification yields lower than 70%. When monocomponent EG was used to treat the same pulps, depending on enzyme charge and incubation time, a wide range of intrinsic viscosity reduction was obtained (up to 74%). Results showed that eucalyptus pulps are more accessible and easier to hydrolyze by enzymes than pine pulps and that the conversion of cellulose I to cellulose II hydrate only has the effect of increasing saccharification of CCE pine samples. Viscosity reduction of CCE pulps and EG treated pulps were obtained in a wide range indicating that pulps presented characteristics suitable for cellulose derivatives production.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9370887
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-93708872022-08-12 Alkalization of Kraft Pulps from Pine and Eucalyptus and Its Effect on Enzymatic Saccharification and Viscosity Control of Cellulose Carrillo-Varela, Isabel Vidal, Claudia Vidaurre, Sebastián Parra, Carolina Machuca, Ángela Briones, Rodrigo Mendonça, Regis Teixeira Polymers (Basel) Article Bleached kraft pulps from eucalyptus and pine were subjected to cold caustic extraction (CCE) with NaOH (5, 10, 17.5, and 35%) for hemicelluloses removal and to increase cellulose accessibility. The effect of these changes was evaluated in enzymatic saccharification with the multicomponent Cellic CTec3 enzyme cocktail, and in viscosity reduction of pulps with the monocomponent Trichoderma reesei endoglucanase (EG). After CCE with 10% NaOH (CCE10) and 17.5% NaOH (CCE17.5), hemicellulose content lower than 1% was achieved in eucalyptus and pine pulps, respectively. At these concentrations, cellulose I started to be converted into cellulose II. NaOH concentrations higher than 17.5% decreased the intrinsic viscosity (from 730 to 420 mL/g in eucalyptus and from 510 to 410 mL/g in pine). Cellulose crystallinity was reduced from 60% to 44% in eucalyptus and from 71% to 44% in pine, as the NaOH concentration increased. Enzymatic multicomponent saccharification showed higher glucose yields in all CCE-treated eucalyptus samples (up to 93%) while only CCE17.5 and CCE35 pine pulps achieved 90% after 40 h of incubation. Untreated bleached pulps of both species presented saccharification yields lower than 70%. When monocomponent EG was used to treat the same pulps, depending on enzyme charge and incubation time, a wide range of intrinsic viscosity reduction was obtained (up to 74%). Results showed that eucalyptus pulps are more accessible and easier to hydrolyze by enzymes than pine pulps and that the conversion of cellulose I to cellulose II hydrate only has the effect of increasing saccharification of CCE pine samples. Viscosity reduction of CCE pulps and EG treated pulps were obtained in a wide range indicating that pulps presented characteristics suitable for cellulose derivatives production. MDPI 2022-07-31 /pmc/articles/PMC9370887/ /pubmed/35956642 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14153127 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Carrillo-Varela, Isabel
Vidal, Claudia
Vidaurre, Sebastián
Parra, Carolina
Machuca, Ángela
Briones, Rodrigo
Mendonça, Regis Teixeira
Alkalization of Kraft Pulps from Pine and Eucalyptus and Its Effect on Enzymatic Saccharification and Viscosity Control of Cellulose
title Alkalization of Kraft Pulps from Pine and Eucalyptus and Its Effect on Enzymatic Saccharification and Viscosity Control of Cellulose
title_full Alkalization of Kraft Pulps from Pine and Eucalyptus and Its Effect on Enzymatic Saccharification and Viscosity Control of Cellulose
title_fullStr Alkalization of Kraft Pulps from Pine and Eucalyptus and Its Effect on Enzymatic Saccharification and Viscosity Control of Cellulose
title_full_unstemmed Alkalization of Kraft Pulps from Pine and Eucalyptus and Its Effect on Enzymatic Saccharification and Viscosity Control of Cellulose
title_short Alkalization of Kraft Pulps from Pine and Eucalyptus and Its Effect on Enzymatic Saccharification and Viscosity Control of Cellulose
title_sort alkalization of kraft pulps from pine and eucalyptus and its effect on enzymatic saccharification and viscosity control of cellulose
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9370887/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35956642
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14153127
work_keys_str_mv AT carrillovarelaisabel alkalizationofkraftpulpsfrompineandeucalyptusanditseffectonenzymaticsaccharificationandviscositycontrolofcellulose
AT vidalclaudia alkalizationofkraftpulpsfrompineandeucalyptusanditseffectonenzymaticsaccharificationandviscositycontrolofcellulose
AT vidaurresebastian alkalizationofkraftpulpsfrompineandeucalyptusanditseffectonenzymaticsaccharificationandviscositycontrolofcellulose
AT parracarolina alkalizationofkraftpulpsfrompineandeucalyptusanditseffectonenzymaticsaccharificationandviscositycontrolofcellulose
AT machucaangela alkalizationofkraftpulpsfrompineandeucalyptusanditseffectonenzymaticsaccharificationandviscositycontrolofcellulose
AT brionesrodrigo alkalizationofkraftpulpsfrompineandeucalyptusanditseffectonenzymaticsaccharificationandviscositycontrolofcellulose
AT mendoncaregisteixeira alkalizationofkraftpulpsfrompineandeucalyptusanditseffectonenzymaticsaccharificationandviscositycontrolofcellulose