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Apricot Seed Shells and Walnut Shells as Unconventional Sugars and Lignin Sources

The present study focuses on using apricot seeds shells and walnut shells as a potential renewable material for biorefinery in Ukraine. The goal of the research work was to determine the relationship between the chemical composition of solid residues from biomass after acid pretreatment with H(2)SO(...

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Autores principales: Halysh, Vita, Romero-García, Juan Miguel, Vidal, Alfonso M., Kulik, Tetiana, Palianytsia, Borys, García, Minerva, Castro, Eulogio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9918925/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36771117
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules28031455
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author Halysh, Vita
Romero-García, Juan Miguel
Vidal, Alfonso M.
Kulik, Tetiana
Palianytsia, Borys
García, Minerva
Castro, Eulogio
author_facet Halysh, Vita
Romero-García, Juan Miguel
Vidal, Alfonso M.
Kulik, Tetiana
Palianytsia, Borys
García, Minerva
Castro, Eulogio
author_sort Halysh, Vita
collection PubMed
description The present study focuses on using apricot seeds shells and walnut shells as a potential renewable material for biorefinery in Ukraine. The goal of the research work was to determine the relationship between the chemical composition of solid residues from biomass after acid pretreatment with H(2)SO(4), alkaline pretreatment with NaOH, and a steam explosion pretreatment and the recovery of sugars and lignin after further enzymatic hydrolysis with the application of an industrial cellulase Cellic CTec2. Apricot seeds shells and walnut shells consist of lots of cellulose (35.01 and 24.19%, respectively), lignin (44.55% and 44.63%, respectively), hemicelluloses (10.77% and 26.68%, respectively), and extractives (9.97% and 11.41%, respectively), which affect the efficiency of the bioconversion of polysaccharides to sugars. The alkaline pretreatment was found to be more efficient in terms of glucose yield in comparison with that of acid and steam explosion, and the maximum enzymatic conversions of cellulose reached were 99.7% and 94.6% for the solids from the apricot seeds shells and the walnut shells, respectively. The maximum amount of lignin (82%) in the residual solid was obtained during the processing of apricot seed shells submitted to the acid pretreatment. The amount of lignin in the solids interferes with the efficiency of enzymatic hydrolysis. The results pave the way for the efficient and perspective utilization of shells through the use of inexpensive, simple and affordable chemical technologies, obtaining value-added products, and thus, reducing the amount of environmental pollution (compared to the usual disposal practice of direct burning) and energy and material external dependency (by taking advantage of these renewable, low-cost materials).
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spelling pubmed-99189252023-02-12 Apricot Seed Shells and Walnut Shells as Unconventional Sugars and Lignin Sources Halysh, Vita Romero-García, Juan Miguel Vidal, Alfonso M. Kulik, Tetiana Palianytsia, Borys García, Minerva Castro, Eulogio Molecules Article The present study focuses on using apricot seeds shells and walnut shells as a potential renewable material for biorefinery in Ukraine. The goal of the research work was to determine the relationship between the chemical composition of solid residues from biomass after acid pretreatment with H(2)SO(4), alkaline pretreatment with NaOH, and a steam explosion pretreatment and the recovery of sugars and lignin after further enzymatic hydrolysis with the application of an industrial cellulase Cellic CTec2. Apricot seeds shells and walnut shells consist of lots of cellulose (35.01 and 24.19%, respectively), lignin (44.55% and 44.63%, respectively), hemicelluloses (10.77% and 26.68%, respectively), and extractives (9.97% and 11.41%, respectively), which affect the efficiency of the bioconversion of polysaccharides to sugars. The alkaline pretreatment was found to be more efficient in terms of glucose yield in comparison with that of acid and steam explosion, and the maximum enzymatic conversions of cellulose reached were 99.7% and 94.6% for the solids from the apricot seeds shells and the walnut shells, respectively. The maximum amount of lignin (82%) in the residual solid was obtained during the processing of apricot seed shells submitted to the acid pretreatment. The amount of lignin in the solids interferes with the efficiency of enzymatic hydrolysis. The results pave the way for the efficient and perspective utilization of shells through the use of inexpensive, simple and affordable chemical technologies, obtaining value-added products, and thus, reducing the amount of environmental pollution (compared to the usual disposal practice of direct burning) and energy and material external dependency (by taking advantage of these renewable, low-cost materials). MDPI 2023-02-02 /pmc/articles/PMC9918925/ /pubmed/36771117 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules28031455 Text en © 2023 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
Halysh, Vita
Romero-García, Juan Miguel
Vidal, Alfonso M.
Kulik, Tetiana
Palianytsia, Borys
García, Minerva
Castro, Eulogio
Apricot Seed Shells and Walnut Shells as Unconventional Sugars and Lignin Sources
title Apricot Seed Shells and Walnut Shells as Unconventional Sugars and Lignin Sources
title_full Apricot Seed Shells and Walnut Shells as Unconventional Sugars and Lignin Sources
title_fullStr Apricot Seed Shells and Walnut Shells as Unconventional Sugars and Lignin Sources
title_full_unstemmed Apricot Seed Shells and Walnut Shells as Unconventional Sugars and Lignin Sources
title_short Apricot Seed Shells and Walnut Shells as Unconventional Sugars and Lignin Sources
title_sort apricot seed shells and walnut shells as unconventional sugars and lignin sources
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9918925/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36771117
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules28031455
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