Characteristics of the water- And alkali-soluble hemicelluloses fractionated by sequential acidification and graded-ethanol from sweet maize stems

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Abstract

Sweet maize stems were treated with hot water and potassium hydroxide to fractionate hemicellulosic polymers. The results showed that the water-soluble hemicelluloses were mainly composed of glucose (27.83%), xylose (27.32%), and galactose (16.81%). In comparison, alkali-soluble hemicelluloses fractionated by acidification and a graded ethanol solution (10%, 20%, 35%, 50%, 65%, and 80%) were mainly composed of xylose (69.73 to 88.62%) and arabinose (5.41 to 16.20%). More highly branched hemicelluloses tended to be precipitated in a higher concentration of ethanol solution, as revealed by the decreasing xylose to arabinose ratio from 16.43 to 4.21. Structural characterizations indicated that alkali-soluble hemicelluloses fractionated from sweet maize stems were mainly arabinoxylans. The results provided fundamental information on hemicelluloses composition and structure and their potential utilization in the fields of biofuels, biochemicals, and biomaterials.

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Peng, X., Nie, S., Li, X., Huang, X., & Li, Q. (2019). Characteristics of the water- And alkali-soluble hemicelluloses fractionated by sequential acidification and graded-ethanol from sweet maize stems. Molecules, 24(1). https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules24010212

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