Structural evaluation of sugar cane bagasse steam pretreated in the presence of CO₂ and SO ₂
Corrales, Roberta Cristina Novaes Reis | Mendes, Fabiana Magalhães Teixeira | Perrone, Clarissa Cruz | Sant’Anna, Celso | Souza, Wanderley de | Abud, Yuri | Bon, Elba Pinto da Silva | Ferreira-Leitão, Viridiana
BACKGROUND: Previous studies on the use of SO₂ and CO₂ as impregnating agent for sugar cane bagasse steam treatment showed comparative and promising results concerning the cellulose enzymatic hydrolysis and the low formation of the inhibitors furfural and hydroxymethylfurfural for the use of CO₂ at 205°C/15 min or SO₂ at 190°C/5 min. In the present study sugar cane bagasse materials pretreated as aforementioned were analyzed by scanning and transmission electron microscopy (SEM and TEM), X-Ray Diffraction (XRD) and Infrared (FTIR spectroscopy) aiming a better understanding of the structural and chemical changes undergone by the pretreated materials. RESULTS: SEM and TEM data showed that the structural modifications undergone by the pretreatment with CO₂ were less pronounced in comparison to that using SO₂, which can be directly related to the combined severity of each pretreatment. According to XRD data, untreated bagasse showed, as expected, a lower crystallinity index (CI = 48.0%) when compared to pretreated samples with SO₂ (CI = 65.5%) or CO₂ (CI = 56.4%), due to the hemicellulose removal of 68.3% and 40.5%, respectively. FTIR spectroscopy supported SEM, TEM and XRD results, revealing a more extensive action of SO₂. CONCLUSIONS: The SEM, TEM, XRD and FTIR spectroscopy techniques used in this work contributed to structural and chemical analysis of the untreated and pretreated bagasse. The images from SEM and TEM can be related to the severity of SO₂ pretreatment, which is almost twice higher. The crystallinity index values obtained from XRD showed that pretreated materials have higher values when compared with untreated material, due to the partial removal of hemicellulose after pretreatment. FTIR spectroscopy supported SEM, TEM and XRD results. CO₂ can actually be used as impregnating agent for steam pretreatment, although the present study confirmed a more extensive action of SO₂.
Показать больше [+] Меньше [-]Ключевые слова АГРОВОК
Библиографическая информация
Эту запись предоставил National Agricultural Library