Extraction of arabinoxylan from corncob through modified alkaline method to improve xylooligosaccharides synthesis

Extraction of arabinoxylan from corncob through modified alkaline method to improve xylooligosaccharides synthesis

Accepted Manuscript Extraction of arabinoxylan from corn cob through modified alkaline protocol to improve xylooligosaccharides synthesis Pranati Kun...

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Accepted Manuscript Extraction of arabinoxylan from corn cob through modified alkaline protocol to improve xylooligosaccharides synthesis

Pranati Kundu, Sandeep Kumar, Vivek Ahluwalia, Sushil Kumar Kansal, Sasikumar Elumalai PII: DOI: Reference:

S2589-014X(18)30007-0 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biteb.2018.01.007 BITEB 8

To appear in: Received date: Revised date: Accepted date:

9 January 2018 29 January 2018 30 January 2018

Please cite this article as: Pranati Kundu, Sandeep Kumar, Vivek Ahluwalia, Sushil Kumar Kansal, Sasikumar Elumalai , Extraction of arabinoxylan from corn cob through modified alkaline protocol to improve xylooligosaccharides synthesis. The address for the corresponding author was captured as affiliation for all authors. Please check if appropriate. Biteb(2017), https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biteb.2018.01.007

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Extraction of arabinoxylan from corn cob through modified alkaline protocol to improve

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xylooligosaccharides synthesis

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Pranati Kundu,1, 2 Sandeep Kumar,1, 2 Vivek Ahluwalia,1 Sushil Kumar Kansal,2 and

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Sasikumar Elumalai1,†

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Chemical Engineering Division, Center of Innovative and Applied Bioprocessing (CIAB),

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Mohali, Punjab 140306 India

Dr. S. S. Bhatnagar University Institute of Chemical Engineering & Technology,

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Panjab University, Chandigarh 160014 India

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Abstract

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A modified alkaline protocol involving a combination of NaOH and NH4OH was employed for

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the isolation of hemicellulose from corncob. During the extraction of hemicellulose, alkaline

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reagents promoted selective cleavage of ester and ether linkages in corncob biomass. It was

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possible to obtain a hemicellulose fraction consisted of considerable branching constituents

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(arabinose and uronic acid, and low lignin). Based on modeling analysis, reaction parameters

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such as alkali concentration and temperature significantly influenced the amount of total

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hemicellulose extracted. Subsequent hydrolysis of isolated hemicellulose in the presence of

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H2SO4 resulted in better conversion (69% wt.) with enriched XOs conc. (73.68% with DP up to

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4) than other fractions under milder conditions. Advantageously, gas phase NH3 formation was

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achieved during the reaction, where NaOH and NH4OH mix was used at an equal ratio that

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Author correspondence email: [email protected] (Tel: +91-172-5221-444). 1

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could significantly help in reducing the overall processing cost of XOs production (through

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recycling and reuse) during large-scale manufacture.

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Key words: xylooligosaccharide, corncob, hemicellulose, arabinoxylan, severity parameter

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1. INTRODUCTION

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Xylooligosaccharides (XOs) have been receiving considerable attention in recent years due to

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their potential applications in food and pharmaceutical industries. They are known for their

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‘prebiotic’ effects when consumed as a part of the diet. The fast growth of the functional food

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market and increasing number of other industrial applications has led researcher’s world-over, to

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explore different sources and develop technologies for the commercial production of XOs with a

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defined degree of polymerization (DP). XOs are a mixture of xylose oligomers commonly

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composed of 2 to 10 units, which can be obtained by hydrolyzing β-(1→4)-glycosidic linkages

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of xylan. The application of these oligosaccharides varies according to the chain length, for

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example, xylobiose (DP 2) is mainly considered for food applications (Chapla, Pandit, & Shah,

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2012; Vazquez, Alonso, Domınguez, & Parajo, 2000). Xylan can be extracted from under-

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utilized lignocellulosic biomass, such as corncob and bagasse as hemicellulose or hetero-xylan.

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Among the agri-residue biomass, corn cob is known to be an excellent substrate for the

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production of several industrial enzymes (e.g., cellulase, xylanase), XOs, xylitol, and xylose.

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Although corncob is rich in hemicellulose (35-40% wt.), yet its potential as an important source

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of xylan is still challenging due to its heterogeneity (Yuan, Zhang, Qian, & Yang, 2004).

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Hemicellulose is considered to be a complex component of the plant cell wall due to its close

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT association with cellulose and lignin constituents through hydrogen and covalent linkages. This

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hetero-polymer is an amorphous polysaccharide, which has β-(1→4)-linked backbones with an

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equatorial configuration, consisting of predominantly xylan (xylose units accounts averagely

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>70%), carbohydrate residues, e.g., arabinose, galactose, glucose, mannose, uronic acid, and an

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aromatic constituent-lignin. The composition of hemicellulose varies in different plant species.

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For example, the dominant form of hemicellulose polysaccharide in annual plants like straw and

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grass is (glucurono) arabino-xylan, which has a backbone of β-(1-4)-xylosyl units linked with a

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few short side chains of arabinosyl at O-2 and/or O-3 position, and α-(1,2)-glucuronic acid

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and/or its 4-O-methyl derivative on O-2 and acetyl group on the arabinose or xylose. To some

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extent, the xylan branch groups can be associated with other groups. Aromatic feruloyl (from

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ferulic and diferulic acids), and p-coumaryl have been reported to be attached to arabinose

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residues at the O-5 position (Carvalho, de Oliva Neto, Da Silva, & Pastore, 2013; Wang et al.,

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2015).

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Hemicelluloses are generally classified as alkali-soluble material after removal of the

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pectic substances due to their weak inter-unit linkages between the substituted constituents

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(Farhat et al., 2017). Till date, a variety of extraction methods have been reported, including

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steam and alkali extraction as well as other supplementary combinations, such as alkali and

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hydrogen peroxide, alkali and chlorite solutions or dimethyl sulfoxide. The final composition of

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hemicellulose is dependent on nature of the chemicals employed (da Silva, de Oliveira, da Silva

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Neto, Pimentel, & dos Santos, 2015). Much of the extraction studies have used NaOH or KOH as

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carbohydrate dissolution reagent due to its efficacy and low cost (Qing, Li, Kumar, & Wyman,

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2013). It has been reported that NaOH treatment effectively disrupts the cell wall by dissolving

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hemicellulose and lignin, hydrolyzing uronic and acid esters, thereby cause swelling of cellulose

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recent studies have used aqueous NH3, which is known to cleave the C-O-C bonds in lignin

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selectively, and ether and ester bonds in lignin-carbohydrate complexes. However, this treatment

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resulted in limited carbohydrate dissolution and also, it may not be effective for the pretreatment

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of biomass material having relatively higher lignin content such as wood feedstocks (Gunawan et

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al., 2017). However, these alkaline treatments cause remarkable morphological changes in the

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resultant substrate, thereby improving its accessibility of chemicals or enzymes during

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depolymerization reaction (da Costa Sousa et al., 2016).

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The traditional XOs production methods using lignocellulosic biomass involves the use

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of either single-step or multi-step processing technique (Carvalho et al., 2013). The commonly

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preferred techniques in direct XOs synthesis are auto-hydrolysis and treatment of biomass in the

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presence of acid or enzyme (Akpinar, Erdogan, & Bostanci, 2009a; Surek & Buyukkileci, 2017).

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However, these techniques normally produce low product yield (≤10% xylan conversion). The

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resultant hydrolysate in the case of acid hydrolysis consists of a variety of undesirable

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components, including soluble lignin. In addition, it generates a large amount of mono- and di-

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saccharide units along with its dehydration products (e.g., furfural) and thus, requires extensive

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purification steps (Aachary & Prapulla, 2011; Akpinar, Erdogan, & Bostanci, 2009b). However,

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the two-stage approach involves the extraction of hemicellulose preferentially using alkaline

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reagent and further hydrolysis in the presence of acid or enzyme. This method is industrially

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viable due to its high product yield (25-37% XOs conversion) along with the desired degree of

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polymerization (DP 2 to 6) (Brienzo, Carvalho, & Milagres, 2010; Michelin, Ruiz, Maria de

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Lourdes, & Teixeira, 2018). However, hemicellulose yield and its characteristics are highly

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dependent on the employed extraction protocol. Similarly, the purpose and application of the

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hemicellulose also vary according to the extraction method (H. Li et al., 2015). The important

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characteristics of hemicellulose for applications in derived compounds preparations, including

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XOs,

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branching/substitution (e.g., sugars units, acetyl groups, and phenolics), residual lignin, solubility

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and reactivity (Luo et al., 2012; Qing et al., 2013). In the present study, a modified alkaline

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protocol involving both NaOH and NH4OH was employed during the hemicellulose extraction

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with the aim of achieving a fraction consisting nominal branched units that allows enriched

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xylooligosaccharieds synthesis during the secondary reaction in the presence of acid or enzymes

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(de Figueiredo, Carvalho, Brienzo, Campioni, & de Oliva-Neto, 2017). In order to verify the

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most influential parameter during the hemicellulose extraction through the modified protocol, an

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extended severity parameter model was used.

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biochemicals

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2. EXPERIMENTAL METHODS

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2.1 Chemicals

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Analytical grade chemicals and solvents, including H2SO4, NaOH, NH4OH, and ethanol were

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purchased from Sigma Aldrich (India). Carbohydrate standards, such as glucose, xylose, and

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arabinose were also purchased from Sigma Aldrich (India). XOs standards ranging from xylose

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to xylopentose were purchased from Megazyme Inc., USA. All chemicals used in this study were

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used as received without any modifications unless otherwise indicated.

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2.2 Feedstock preparation and compositional analysis

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Corncob sample was collected from an agricultural field near Mohali (Punjab), India. It was air-

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dried to 6% moisture content (dry basis). The particle size was reduced to 0.5 mm (30 mesh)

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material was stored in plastic bags and kept under refrigeration condition until further use. The

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fractional compositional analysis of corncob sample was done by following standard NREL

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protocols. In order to determine the carbohydrate contents (glucose, xylose, and arabinose), and

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other lignin and ash contents of the sample, it was first extracted with ethanol/benzene mixture

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(Sluiter, Ruiz, Scarlata, Sluiter, & Templeton, 2010). Similarly, glucuronic acid content was

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determined according to the method of reported method of (Tobimatsu et al., 2012).

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2.3 Hemicellulose extraction from corncob

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The finely ground corncob powder was mixed with the alkaline solution (NaOH plus NH4OH or

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NaOH or NH4OH) at concentrations ranging between 0.25 and 2.5 M in 250 ml glass bottle (da

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Silva et al., 2015). The solid to liquid ratio was maintained at 1:20 (w/v). The bottle was tightly

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closed to avoid any evaporation and mixed using a magnetic stirrer. The corncob slurry was

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gradually heated to the desired temperature under stirring condition (200 rpm) on a hotplate.

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After completion of reaction (up to 60 min), the resultant thick slurry was centrifuged at 8000

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rpm for 15 min at 10°C (Eppendorf 5810R), and the supernatant was collected and cooled to

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room temperature. The pH of the supernatant was reduced to 5.5 by addition of 6 M HCl at room

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temperature and followed by addition of ~3 volumes of absolute ethanol. The sample was

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centrifuged at 8000 rpm for 15 min 10oC to collect pellets rich in hemicellulose. They were

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washed thoroughly using distilled and freeze dried by using Martin Christ Delta 2–24 LSC plus

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drier. Finally, the hemicellulosic fractions obtained through different treatments viz. NaOH plus

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NH4OH, NaOH, and NH4OH were labeled as H1, H2, and H3, respectively. After extraction, the

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carbohydrate content of the isolated hemicelluloses was determined according to the standard

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NREL protocol (Sluiter et al., 2010).

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2.4 Acidic hydrolysis of isolated hemicellulose fractions

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About 100 mg sample of isolated hemicellulosic fractions (H1, H2, and H3) were suspended in 10

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ml 0.25 M H2SO4 solution and placed in an oil bath at 100°C under continuous stirring condition

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(Bian et al., 2014). Once the reaction was completed, the mixture was cooled down immediately

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to room temperature using an ice bath, neutralized with calcium carbonate (CaCO3) solution, and

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centrifuged at 8000 rpm for 15 min at 10°C to remove the resulted precipitate. The supernatant

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was filtered through 0.45 µm nylon filter. The hydrolyzed products were analyzed using high-

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performance liquid chromatography (HPLC, Agilent Technologies 1200 infinity series, CA,

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USA) for XOs determination. The system was equipped with Agilent Hi-Plex Ca column (300

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mm length, 8 µm porosity) and maintained at 85°C, 0.6 mL/min of HPLC grade water (mobile

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eluent) on refractive index (RI) detector operated at 40°C. The concentration of XOs was

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estimated using their respective calibration charts prepared by commercial grade standards. At

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the same time, traditional thin layer chromatographic (TLC) technique was also employed for the

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determination of XOs. The solvent system used was ethyl acetate:acetic acid:1-butanol:water

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mixture prepared in the ratio of 4:3:2:2. 1- naphthyl ethylenediamine dihydrochloride (0.5%) in

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5 % sulfuric acid : methanol mix was used as spraying agent.

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2.5 Enzymatic hydrolysis of isolated hemicellulose

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Twenty mg sample of isolated hemicellulosic fractions (H1, H2, and H3) were suspended in 10 ml

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of 50 mM sodium acetate buffer (pH 4.8) in 100 mL Erlenmeyer flask (Huang et al., 2017). The

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substrate was loaded with 10 U/ml commercial xylanase (Sigma Aldrich, India) and incubated at

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50°C under continuous shaking condition (250 rpm). The enzymatic reaction was continued up

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to 24 h. A ~0.5 ml aliquot was taken at each specific time intervals and analyzed for XOs

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concentration on HPLC by adapting the same method, as mentioned earlier.

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2.6 Colorimetric ammonia determination

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Ammonia concentration in the supplemented alkaline solution was determined calorimetrically

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(Elumalai, Roa-Espinosa, Markley, & Runge, 2014). Briefly, 5 ml sample solution

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(NaOH+NH4OH) was taken in an Erlenmeyer flask with stopper, and 0.2 ml phenol reagent (20

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g phenol in 200 ml 95% v/v ethanol) was added. After stirring the mixture for few mins, the

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following reagents were added sequentially as 0.2 ml of sodium nitroprusside (1.0 g sodium

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nitroprusside in 200 ml water) and 0.5 ml of oxidizing solution (a mixture of 100 ml alkaline

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reagent and 25 ml of sodium hypochlorite). The alkaline reagent was prepared by dissolving 100

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g sodium citrate and 5 g NaOH in 500 ml distilled water. The solution mixture was stirred for

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few mins and allowed to stand for 1 h at room temperature. Finally, the generated blue color was

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read at 640 nm on UV/Vis-spectrophotometer (Agilent Cary 60).

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2.7 Analytical instrumentation

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Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR): Hemicellulose fractions obtained through

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different alkaline treatments were analyzed on FTIR instrument (Agilent Carry 600). The

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spectrum were recorded between 400 and 4000 cm-1 at 4 cm-1 nominal resolution under room

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temperature condition with maximum 10 scans.

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NMR spectroscopy: 2D-HSQC NMR spectra of the hemicellulose fractions (H1, H2, and H3)

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were acquired on a Bruker AVIII 600 MHz spectrophotometer using ~40 mg sample dissolved in

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1 mL D2O. Data processing was performed using standard Bruker topspin NMR software.

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2.8 Alkaline treatment modeling

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Modified combined severity model developed by Silverstein and co-workers was used for better

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prediction of yield responses during alkaline treatments (Elumalai, Agarwal, & Sangwan, 2016;

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Silverstein, Chen, Sharma-Shivappa, Boyette, & Osborne, 2007). The model combines the main

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processing parameters like alkali concentration, temperature and time into a single factor, in

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order to relate to reaction recoveries, as represented in Eq. (1):

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T −T

r b M0 = t × Cn × exp [( 14.75 )]

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where Mo - modified severity parameter; t - residence time (min); C - chemical concentration (%

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wt.); Tr - reaction temperature (°C); Tb - base temperature (100°C); n - arbitrary constant; 14.75 -

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conventional energy of activation. Meanwhile, hemicellulose constituents recovery, mainly

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xylose, arabinose and uronic acid during various alkaline treatments was predicted using second

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order polynomial model consisting of alkali concentration, temperature and time, as continuous

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variables is Eq. (2):

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Yresponse = β0 + β1 C + β2 T + β3 t + β4 CT + β5 Tt + β6 Ct + β7 C2 + β8 T 2 + β9 t 2

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(2)

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Where β0 is the intercept; β1-n is the interaction coefficients; C is the alkali concentration (% wt.);

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T is the temperature (°C); t is the reaction time (min). The recoveries data were subjected to

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ANOVA analysis to examine the adjustment of the model using SPSS software.

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2.9 Statistical data analysis

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Statistical regression and ANOVA analyses were performed to the alkaline treatments recovery

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data using SPSS software v23. The quality of model fit was expressed by the squared correlation

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coefficient, R2 value. Model terms were evaluated based on the probability (p) value with 95%

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confidence. Multiple (pairwise) comparisons among alkaline treatment recovery means were

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carried out using Tukey’s honestly significance difference (HSD) test at α levels of 0.05.

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3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

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3.1 Alkaline treatment of corncob for hemicellulose isolation

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The present study employed a modified alkaline protocol, which involved both NaOH and

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NH4OH in equal proportions for the purpose of hemicellulose extraction from corncob and used

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for XOs synthesis. With respect to the characteristic nature of these alkaline reagents, it can be

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reasonably expected that selective cleavage of ester and ether linkages of the branching as well

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as associated constituents of hemicellulose, thereby rendering it suitable for improved

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hydrolysis. Initial fractional compositional analyses of native corncob biomass revealed that it

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consisted 26.8% glucose, 26.2% xylose, 1.8% arabinose, 3.4% glucuronic acid, 20.68% both

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klason and soluble lignins, and 1.5% ash contents (dry wt. basis). Yield responses of the

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hemicellulose constituents with respect to the increased severities during alkaline treatment were

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recorded and presented in Table 1. Apparent results displayed that significantly improved solids

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT (relative differences between 8 and 74% wt.) recovery with xylose content (27-46% wt. based on

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fractional composition analysis of solid precipitate) was achieved at incremented reaction

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severities (combined severity factor, CS ranging from 2.43 to 3.75). However, increased residual

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arabinose content (referring L-arabinose) was attained relatively 7-fold throughout the

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incremented severities (i.e., xylose to arabinose ratio decreased from 9.1 to 6.2). It was also

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noted that treatment maintained increasing residual acetyl content (referring to glucuronic acid

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and/or 4-O-methyl glucuronic acid) in the precipitate, i.e., 4-fold relative differences and

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therefore, the xylose to uronic acid ratio was decreased from 6.8 to 3.7. This characteristic

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changes in the isolated fraction might be attributed to the disruption and breaking of hydrogen

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bonds, and selective cleavage of the ester-linked substituents of the hemicellulose and other

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associated cell wall constituents through the parallel action of alkaline reagents, depending on its

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distinct nature (S.-L. Sun, Wen, Ma, & Sun, 2013).

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For comparison, reference treatment involving either NaOH or NH4OH alone was

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employed for the extraction of hemicellulose from corncob biomass under similar conditions

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(Table 1). The NaOH treatment resulted in increased xylan yield, i.e., maximum ~2-fold relative

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differences

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Table 1. Alkaline isolation of hemicellulose from corncob biomass under varied severity conditions. Alkali load on solid mass (gm per gm) NaOH NH4OH 2.50 4.24 2.50 4.24 2.50 4.24 5.0 8.48 5.0 8.48 5.0 8.48 5.0 5.0 5.0 10.0 10.0 10.0 8.48 8.48 8.48 16.96 16.96 16.96

t (min)

Modified CS factor, log Mo

80 100 121 80 100 121 80 100 121 80 100 121 80 100 121 80 100 121

60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60

2.43 (n=1.5) 3.02 3.64 2.54(n=1.2) 3.13 3.75 2.10(n=1.3) 2.69 3.31 2.49(n=1.3) 3.08 3.70 2.40(n=1.3) 2.99 3.60 2.54(n=1.5) 3.13 3.75

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D E

C A

c

Xylose yield (% wt.)

U N

A

M

T P

9.6(14.5) 0.9**(0.4**)

b

12.6 14.3 16.1 36.6 32.1 19.9 49.2 31.8 6.5 17.8 72.9 65.2 0.7 1.7 2.4 0.9 2.5 4.3

T P

I R

C S

E C

Std. error of mean Tukey’s HSD @ p<0.05 a

Solid precipitate recovery (% wt.) 5.3 b(8.0) 7.1(9.5) 9.2(8.6) 14.2(23.0) 13.9(19.1) 15.4(12.1) 17.0(28.5) 18.8(16.2) 12.1(6.0) 26.6(42.7) 26.1(44.4) 26.2(33.4) 0.3(0.4) 0.9(1.1) 1.7(1.8) 0.4(0.6) 1.2(1.6) 2.5(2.9)

a

T (°C)

26.1 0.1**

Xylose to arabinose ratio 9.1 10.3 6.8 7.9 6.9 6.2 13.4 10.4 6.6 17.4 12.7 8.0 8.6 10.2 14.2 7.5 6.6 6.0

Xylose to uronic acid ratio 6.8 3.8 4.0 4.9 6.6 3.7 6.6 4.8 1.5 1.5 5.3 5.6 4.3 3.4 3.2 6.7 4.4 3.8

9.1 0.1*

0.4 0.1*

Modified combined severity factor; Total carbohydrate recovery was calculated based on solids yield with residual sugars content (glucose, xylose, arabinose, uronic acid) to the potential contents; b xylan recovery was calculated based on the potential xylose content. Asterisks (*) and (**) indicate statistical significance and not significance at 95% confidence level.

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT In contrast to the response attained with modified alkaline treatment, decreasing pattern of

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residual arabinose was observed with the incremented severities up to 58% relative

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differences (from 4.07 to 1.74% wt. at 10% loading and between 80-121 °C), due to which

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the xyl/ara was decreased from 13.4 to 8.0 (at the same time xylose concentration was

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decreased from 71.8 to 65.2). However, the uronic acid concentration was steadily increased

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with the corresponding severity levels up to 60% relative differences, resulted in decreased

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proportionate of xyl/uro ratio from 6.6 to 5.6. Normally, strong alkaline solvents show higher

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selectivity towards cleavage of weak bonds (ester linkages) connecting arabinose and uronic

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acid contents, however, the tendency of the release of each of the constituents was dependent

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of biomass heterogeneity and processing conditions (Luo et al., 2012; R. Sun, Lawther, &

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Banks, 1995). Whereas, the NH4OH treatment could yield relatively up to 6-fold solid and 9-

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fold xylan recoveries along with meager residuals (arabinose and uronic acid) concentrations,

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i.e., < 10% wt. in response to the increased severity levels (CS from 2.40 to 3.75). While the

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comparison of the yield results, the modified protocol resulted in achieving relatively 12-15%

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lower and 50-60% higher solids precipitate yield with xylan content than individual NaOH

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and NH4OH protocols, respectively. However, it extracted the xylan consisting more

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branched substituents, such as arabinose and uronic acid that is relatively up to 54% and ~5-

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fold than NaOH and NH4OH treatments, respectively. Further residual lignin content of the

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solids obtained under maximum severity conditions was determined, and it was estimated

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that modified protocol yielded 18% wt., whereas NaOH and NH4OH protocols yielded 24%

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and 6% wt. respectively. This adverse effect is caused due to the characteristic effect of

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NaOH, which effectively solubilize the hemicellulose and lignin through hydrolyzing the

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ester linkage constituents, such as arabinose, uronic acid, and acetic acid. It also cleaves the

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ether linkages between hemicellulose and lignin, and the ester bonds between lignin and/or

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT hemicelluloses and hydroxycinnamic acids (e.g., ferulic and p-coumaric acids) (Bender et al.,

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2017; S.-L. Sun et al., 2013). Mechanistically, NH4OH reacts selectively with lignin by

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cleaving C-O-C bonds in lignin and ether and ester bonds in lignin-carbohydrate complexes

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but limits carbohydrate extraction (da Costa Sousa et al., 2016). Therefore, results suggest

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that change in the characteristic nature of alkaline solvent greatly influenced the selective

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cleavage of alkali-labile linkages, thereby enabling the release of carbohydrate sugars along

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with lignin (Bender et al., 2017). However, the absolute relation between cleavage

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mechanism of xylan and its branched substituents during modified alkaline isolation is not

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clear. Overall, maximum yield responses were achieved under higher severity conditions and

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therefore, it was selected for further validation. However, those fractions exhibited lower

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carbohydrate recovery might be attributed to the stringent reaction led to the loss of

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carbohydrates via hydrolysis and further dehydration, and also, lignin. In complementary to

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the above alterations, it can be expected that these in the substrate fraction could positively

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reflect the hydrolysis result.

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Additionally, uncontrolled gas phase NH3 formation was observed during alkaline

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supplementation reaction after prolonged reaction (60 min) due to the continuous supply of

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external OH- ions by NaOH into the medium consisting NH4OH, according to shift reaction

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mechanism (see E-supplement data) (Elumalai et al., 2014). In practical, this phenomenon

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could favorably help in the development of cost-effective biorefining process through

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recovery and reuse technique.

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3.2 Modeling of alkaline isolation of hemicellulose

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In order to validate the effectiveness of alkaline solvents on hemicellulose recoveries during

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corncob treatments, conventional models, such as linear and quadratic algebraic equations 14

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dissolution of carbohydrate constituents after alcohol washing, assuming complete recovery

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of dissolution constituents, as recovery data presented in Table 1. The second order

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polynomial model consisting of the following dependent variables: alkali concentration (C),

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temperature (T) and reaction time (t) was used to measure the respective percent recovery of

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hemicellulosic constituents mainly xylose, arabinose and uronic acid during treatment. The

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model estimates for recovery of all three constituents were identified from ANOVA analysis

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as linear, interaction and quadratic terms, and used to quantify the predicted recoveries.

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Based on ANOVA results, the model equations Eqs. (3-5) represent for all three constituents

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recovery were in the following form (see E-supplement data):

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Xylose recovery, % = −59.09 + 2.25C − 0.16T + 0.11C2 − 0.01𝑇 2 − 0.07C ∗ T + 0.16𝐶 ∗

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𝑡 + 0.01𝑇 ∗ 𝑡

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Arabinose recovery, % = −165.55 + 6.59C + 0.155T + 0.32C2 + 0.01𝑇 2 − 0.04C ∗ T +

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0.18𝐶 ∗ 𝑡 + 0.01𝑇 ∗ 𝑡

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Uronic acid recovery, % = −15.24 + 0.40C + 0.01T + 0.02C2 + 0.01𝑇 2 − 0.02C ∗ T + 0.03𝐶 ∗ 𝑡 + 0.01𝑇 ∗ 𝑡

(5)

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(4)

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(3)

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Individual xylose, arabinose, and uronic acid linear models exhibited the correlation values

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(R2) more than 0.90 with respect to the reaction severities, based on regression analysis.

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Further the respective values of C, T, and t were incorporated into the polynomial equation in

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order to validate the model, and consequently, plots between predicted versus experimental 15

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT values were made to all hemicellulose constituents, as displayed in Fig. 1. The plots

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established R2 values of 0.89, 0.96 and 0.82 to the corresponding hemicellulose constituents,

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establishing the model better predicted the yield responses. Based on statistical analysis, C

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and T had the most influential impact on hemicellulose constituents recovery among

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dependent variables and in particular, had the strongest effect on xylose and arabinose yield

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(p<0.05-0.1) (see E-supplement data). Nearly similar results were observed to the individual

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reference treatment protocols involving only NaOH or NH4OH, i.e., xylose and arabinose

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were strongly influenced by C and T, where the R2 value lies in the range 0.50-0.95 and

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p<0.05-0.1, as data presented in E-supplement data. This is caused due to less available

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model terms in the equation and multi-step procedure for carbohydrate recovery and

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therefore, it could not be effectively explained the model for better prediction of the yield

332

responses (Haghi & Zaikov, 2014).

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Simultaneously, a linear model relating combined severity parameter (single factor)

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and the model recovery responses was used to represent the yield data (based on Table 1) of

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modified alkaline protocol, as follows Eqs. (7-9) (according to E-supplement data):

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Xylose recovery, % = 3.01 ∗ log Mo + 9.64

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Arabinose recovery, % = 9.79 ∗ log Mo + 0.78

(7)

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Uronic acid recovery, % = 0.59 ∗ log Mo + 2.17

(8)

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(6)

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Fig.1 Correlation plot of modified severity factor (log Mo) vs. experimentally yield data of xylose, arabinose, and uronic acid through different

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alkaline protocols using (a) NaOH supplemented with NH4OH, (b) individual NaOH and (c) NH4OH reagents.

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT While plotting the graph between respective log Mo versus hemicellulose constituents

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recovery, the R2 value lies between 0.55 and 0.95 (see E-supplement data). The n-values for

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dissolution of these hemicellulose constituents that provided the best model fits were 0.1, 10

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and 0.1, respectively and were obtained by data training while keeping the log Mo value

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positive range. The modified severity parameter model was validated by plotting the

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predicted values against experimental percent recovery of hemicellulose constituents.

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Resulted in R2 of the plots exhibited between 0.5 and 0.9, indicating that model fairly

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predicted the response yield (as provided in E-supplement data). Presumably, this might be

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attributed to the feedstock (lignocellulose) heterogeneity and inability of the extended

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severity parameter model to completely capture the dependence of response variables on

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independent variables (treatment recoveries) in the absence of variables like solid to liquid

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ratio, treatment time and physical property of feedstock material (e.g. particle size) (Elumalai

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et al., 2016; Silverstein et al., 2007). Nearly similar results were observed to the reference

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treatment methods (involving only NaOH or NH4OH) that is model less fairly represented the

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response yield data (overall R2 values lies between 0.1 and 0.9) while using the

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correspondingly developed model, based on the data obtained from the respective correlation

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plot, as displayed in E-supplement data.

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3.3 Characterization of isolated hemicelluloses

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Typical FT-IR spectroscopic characterization was performed to the isolated hemicelluloses,

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namely H1, H2, and H3 referring to fractions obtained through modified NaOH plus NH4OH,

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and individual NaOH and NH4OH protocols, respectively, in order to determine its main

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functional groups. The spectra of these three individual fractions were collected between 400

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and 4000 cm-1. The comparative spectrum exhibited nearly identical absorption trend with the

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT samples except for few additional strong absorption intensities with H2 (see E-supplement

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data). In the fingerprint region, the high absorbance at 1584 cm-1 is attributed to C-H

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deformation. Likewise, the small band at 1508 cm-1 originated from the aromatic skeletal

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vibrations of the benzene ring, suggested that minor amount of bound lignin is presented in

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the hemicellulose precipitates. The bands at 1456 and 1374 cm-1 are assigned to C-H

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vibrations of polysaccharides. The presence of glucuronic acid was identified mainly by the

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appearance of symmetric stretching from COO groups at 1420 cm -1. Similarly, the

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wavenumber at 1258 cm-1 is the indicative of carboxylic acid vibrations, which might be due

379

to attachment of 4-O-methyl-α-glucuronic acid side groups. The spectrum displayed that each

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particular polysaccharide had a maximum specific band in the region 1200-800 cm-1, and the

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band at 1149 cm-1 is assigned to C-OH ring vibrations overlapped with stretching vibrations

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of side groups and glycosidic bond vibrations (C-O-C). In accordance with the literature

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reports, absorption peaks attained in the range 1175-1140 cm-1 might possibly due to different

384

conformational states of hemicellulose molecules. Whereas, the peaks within 1170-1050 cm-1

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range are related to the hemicelluloses. In anticipation, H2 exhibited a strong absorption at

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3343 cm-1 and 2950-2850 cm-1 regions are assigned to hydrogen bond O-H stretching and C-

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H stretching vibrations, respectively (Li, Sun, Zhou, Peng, & Sun, 2015; H. Li et al., 2015).

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Additional structural characterization was performed to the hemicelluloses on NMR

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spectroscopy using 2-D HSQC technique. The NMR result of H1, where the five dominant

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signals at δC/δH 102.67/4.38, 73.83/3.21, 75.19/3.36, 75.38/3.68, 64.28/3.97+3.31 are

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typically assigned to C1-H1, C2-H2, C3-H3, C4-H4, C5-H5 of the (1→4)-linked β-D-Xylp units,

392

respectively (see E-supplement data). The cross peaks at 80.84/3.97 (C2) and 86.88/ 4.14 (C4)

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indicated the presence of α-L-Araf residues, and similarly, the cross peak at 74.22/3.39 is

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assigned to the internal Xylp unit in heteroxylan backbone. The presence of D-Galp residues

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT located in the side polysaccharide chains was confirmed from the anomeric carbon signals at

396

101.7/4.33 (C1-H1) and 64.08/3.87. Whereas, H2 reference sample exhibited additional

397

signals over H1 at 100.92/4.25 (C1-H1) and 75.77/ 3.26 (C2-H2), which are assigned to (1→4)-

398

β-D-Xylp-2-O-(4-O-Me-D-GlcpA) unit (see E-supplement data). Furthermore, the cross

399

signals at 73.05/3.03 (C2-H2), 73.12/3.46 (C3-H3), 78.3/3.61 (C4-H4) 78.6/3.81 (C5-H5)

400

represented 4-linked β-glucose units. Other cross peaks at 74.02/3.53 and 63.69/3.87 are

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assigned to (1→4)-linked α-D-Glcp unit. Whereas, signals at 75.97/3.81 (C5-H5) and

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75.77/3.49 (C4-H4) are assigned to the 4-linked β-mannose unit. Similarly, O-CH3 acetyl

403

group was confirmed by the cross signal at 62.33/3.44. Similarly, H3 exhibited nearly same

404

result as that of others (H1 and H2) except few cross signals spotted at 73.24/3.79 (C2-H2),

405

78.31/3.41 (C3-H3), 82.40/3.2 (C4-H4) and 60.96/3.72 (see E-supplement data) are the

406

indicative of methoxyl groups of 4-O-methyl-D-glucuronic acid residues, which were

407

possibly due to inherent branched substituent 4-O-methyl glucuronoxylan. Results were in

408

good agreement with the literature reports (H.-Y. Li et al., 2015; H. Li et al., 2015; Ma et al.,

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2016; Wang et al., 2015). Thus, comparative characterization results ensured the presence of

410

carbohydrates content along with its residual impurities and showed that composition of

411

solids varies depending on the employed alkaline solvent.

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3.4 XOs synthesis from isolated hemicelluloses

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In order to test the effectiveness of the isolated fractions on XOs synthesis, samples H1, H2,

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and H3 were subsequently introduced to hydrolysis in the presence of dilute H2SO4 (4% wt.)

416

at 100 ºC for 60 min. Comparative results displayed that H1 gave better results over others by

417

achieving highest total XOs yield with DP up to 4 (Fig. 2), i.e., 14.3% xylose (X1), 12.2%

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xylobiose (X2), 15.5% xylotriose (X3) and 31.7% wt. xylotetrose (X4) (dry wt. basis).

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Fig. 2 Comparative result of XOs yield achieved during acid hydrolysis at 4% wt. H2SO4 and

423

121°C for 1 h using corncob hemicelluloses obtained after treatment with different alkaline

424

reagents (a) NaOH supplemented with NH4OH, (b) individual NaOH and (c) NH4OH. Error

425

bar indicates standard error.

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Whereas, others yielded relatively 34 to 37% lower XOs with maximum DP of 3. Although

428

xylopentose elution was spotted during chromatographic analysis, accurate estimation could

429

not be made due to the interference of other carbohydrate molecules based on HPLC and

430

TLC chromatograms, as presented in E-supplement data, respectively. Apparent results

431

established that residual impurities, including arabinose, uronic acid, and lignin greatly

432

influenced the XOs conversion. In a typical reaction, arabinose and lignin normally interfere

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 433

with acid hydrolysis reactions due to the ester bond similarities (Chemin et al., 2015).

434

Further, the isolated fractions were evaluated for XOs synthesis against enzyme catalysis

435

using commercial xylanase (endo-xylanase) under standard conditions. In resemblance to the

436

acid hydrolysis result, H1 pronounced remarkable differences, i.e., relatively 10% higher than

437

reference fractions (H2 and H3) (Fig. 3).

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Fig. 3 Comparative XOs yield achieved through enzymatic with xylanase at 50°C up to 24 h

443

using corncob hemicelluloses obtained after alkaline treatment with different alkaline

444

reagents (a) NaOH supplemented with NH4OH, (b) individual NaOH and (c) NH4OH. Error

445

bar indicates standard error.

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT However, the overall yield achievement through enzyme hydrolysis was ~3-fold lower than

448

the literature reports after prolonged hydrolysis (up to 24 h) might be caused due to higher

449

residual impurities in hemicellulose and lower enzyme loadings used. In support, several

450

detailed studies have postulated that branched substituents generally prevent the accessibility

451

of xylanase to approach xylan during hydrolysis, but some endoxylanases prefer hydrolysis

452

of more branched xylans (de Figueiredo et al., 2017). It is worthwhile that presence of side

453

groups exhibit a branched XOS, which largely offers diverse biological properties (Aachary &

454

Prapulla, 2011).

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The major disadvantages of the acidic hydrolysis of xylan are the generation of more

456

monosaccharide units and its derivative products preferentially furfural. Moreover, the

457

distribution of DPs of the XOs products is mainly dependent on the concentration of acid

458

and/or reaction time. Therefore, optimization of the processing conditions during acid

459

hydrolysis was conducted conventionally using the H1 hemicellulosic fraction. The effect of

460

hydrolysis time was studied between 15 and 120 min, while maintaining other parameters

461

constant (4% wt. acid concentration and 100°C) (Fig. 4). The apparent result showed that

462

significantly increased XOs conversion was achieved up to 60 min (~70% wt. total XOs) and

463

further extended reaction resulted in gradually decreasing yield (relatively 10% wt. during

464

each incremented intervals). This is caused due to enhanced cleavage of β-1,4-glycosidic

465

units in xylan that in turn led to yield more short polymeric units (DP<4) under higher

466

severity conditions referring acid concentration, time and temperature.

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Fig. 4 Kinetics of XOs synthesis through acid hydrolysis using corncob hemicellulosic

470

fraction obtained after alkaline treatment using NaOH supplemented NH4OH reagent. Error

471

bar indicates standard error.

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Based on overall process material balance, 5.25% wt. total XOs production could be achieved

474

under the modest reaction conditions through two-stage processing approach using corncob

475

biomass (Fig. 5). However, the process setup enabled to achieve ~2-fold lower XOs yield

476

compared to literature reports involving expensive enzymes and harsh chemicals (NaOH,

477

KOH, H2SO4) under relatively higher severity conditions (Aachary & Prapulla, 2011;

478

Akpinar, Erdogan, Bakir, & Yilmaz, 2010; Akpinar et al., 2009b). This might be due to less

479

chance of the modified alkaline protocol for improved extraction of hemicellulose.

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Fig. 5 Overall material balance of XOs production from corncob biomass through sequential

484

isolation and hydrolysis.

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Overall, it can be noted that in contrary to the hypothesis that modified protocol helps in

487

achieving a fraction consisting minimal residual contaminations, which allows higher XOs

488

conversion. Yet, understanding the mechanism of effect of residual contaminations on XOs

489

synthesis would help in properly addressing the process challenges.

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4. CONCLUSIONS

492

The present study demonstrated that modified alkaline protocol involving both NaOH and

493

NH4OH stimulates the cleavage of alkali-labile linkages between hemicellulose and other

494

associated constituents, depending on its performance nature. Therefore, it allowed for 25

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT enriched xylooligosaccharides synthesis through subsequent hydrolysis reaction in the

496

presence of dilute acid, thereby achieving maximum (73.68% XOs yield with DP up to 4).

497

Whereas, the individual protocols yielded relatively 34 to 37% lower XOs with maximum DP

498

of 3. The results suggested that hemicellulose residual impurities significantly influenced the

499

hydrolysis yield in the presence of acid or enzyme. The combined severity model fairly

500

represented the hemicellulose recovery data might be primarily due to the lignocellulose

501

heterogeneity and inability of the extended model because of the absence of essential other

502

independent variables. In complementary to the lower yield achievement via modified

503

approach, the protocol generates NH3 (gas) during alkali supplementation reaction, which

504

could help positively in the reduction of overall manufacturing cost of XOs through recovery

505

and reuse, in an economic point of view.

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Acknowledgements

508

The authors gratefully thank Department of Biotechnology (Government of India), New

509

Delhi, India for their consistent financial support. S. Elumalai thanks Department of Science

510

and Technology (DST-SERB), New Delhi for the financial support through Grant No.

511

YSS/2014/000031 (2015-18).

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Wang, S., Ru, B., Dai, G., Sun, W., Qiu, K., & Zhou, J. (2015). Pyrolysis mechanism study of minimally damaged hemicellulose polymers isolated from agricultural waste straw samples. Bioresource Technology, 190, 211-218. Yuan, Q., Zhang, H., Qian, Z., & Yang, X. (2004). Pilot‐ plant production of xylo‐ oligosaccharides from corncob by steaming, enzymatic hydrolysis and nanofiltration. Journal of Chemical Technology and Biotechnology, 79(10), 1073-1079.

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Modified alkaline protocol promoted cleavage of ester and ether linked constituents. The protocol permitted achieving enriched XOs through acid hydrolysis. The setup demonstrated a cost-effective process through recovery of reuse of alkali. A net ~5% wt. XOs (X1-X4) can be obtained through the modified approach.

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