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Novel approach for corn straw biorefineries: Production of xylooligosaccharides, lignin and ethanol by nicotinic acid hydrolysis and pentanol pretreatment
The productive separation and conversion of corn straw offers significant prospects for the economic viability of biorefineries centered on straw resources. In this work, a graded utilization method was proposed to produce xylo -oligosaccharides (XOS), ethanol and lignin from corn straw by nicotinic acid (NA) hydrolysis and water/pentanol pretreatment . A XOS yield of 52.6 % was achieved under optimized conditions of 100 mM NA, 170 °C and 30 min. The solid residue was directly treated with water/pentanol, achieving a lignin removal rate of 79.7 %, and the total XOS yield was improved to 62.6 %. The lignin recovered from pentanol had a high purity of 97.6 %, with high phenolic OH content. Simultaneous saccharification and fermentation of final residue resulted in an ethanol yield of 92.0 %, which yielded 55.3 g/L ethanol. Thus, NA hydrolysis and water/pentanol pretreatment provided an efficient, environmentally friendly approach to fractionate corn straw for the co-production of XOS, ethanol, and lignin.