Eco-friendly extraction and characterization of cellulose from oil palm empty fruit bunches

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Abstract

Cellulosic fibers in Oil Palm Empty Fruit Bunches (OPEFB) are tightly packed with lignin, hemicelluloses, small depositions of wax, and inorganic elements. In the present work, eco-friendly reagents with low concentrations of 20% (v/v) formic acid and 10% (v/v) of 30% hydrogen peroxide were employed at 85°C for the extraction of cellulose from OPEFB. The yield of 64% (w/w) achieved was among the highest ever reported. Based on the XRD, the -cellulose content was 93.7% with a high crystallinity of 69.9%. The average diameter was 13.5 μm with structural evidence of separated fibrils as investigated by FESEM. The TEM analysis suggested that the material was crystalline and its geometry was a monoclinic structure. The FTIR spectral peaks representing wax and hemicelluloses at 1735 cm-1 and 1375 cm-1, respectively, and lignin at 1248 cm-1 and 1037 cm-1, were not observed in the extracted OPEFB-cellulose spectra. Based on the TGA results, thermal stability at 325°C with a single degradation curve suggests the purity of OPEFB-cellulose.

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Nazir, M. S., Wahjoedi, B. A., Yussof, A. W., & Abdullah, M. A. (2013). Eco-friendly extraction and characterization of cellulose from oil palm empty fruit bunches. BioResources, 8(2), 2161–2172. https://doi.org/10.15376/biores.8.2.2161-2172

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