Skip to main content

Enhanced rates of enzymatic saccharification and catalytic synthesis of biofuel substrates in gelatinized cellulose generated by trifluoroacetic acid

Abstract

Background

The crystallinity of cellulose is a principal factor limiting the efficient hydrolysis of biomass to fermentable sugars or direct catalytic conversion to biofuel components. We evaluated the impact of TFA-induced gelatinization of crystalline cellulose on enhancement of enzymatic digestion and catalytic conversion to biofuel substrates.

Results

Low-temperature swelling of cotton linter cellulose in TFA at subzero temperatures followed by gentle heating to 55 °C dissolves the microfibril structure and forms composites of crystalline and amorphous gels upon addition of ethanol. The extent of gelatinization of crystalline cellulose was determined by reduction of birefringence in darkfield microscopy, loss of X-ray diffractability, and loss of resistance to acid hydrolysis. Upon freeze-drying, an additional degree of crystallinity returned as mostly cellulose II. Both enzymatic digestion with a commercial cellulase cocktail and maleic acid/AlCl3-catalyzed conversion to 5-hydroxymethylfurfural and levulinic acid were markedly enhanced with the low-temperature swollen cellulose. Only small improvements in rates and extent of hydrolysis and catalytic conversion were achieved upon heating to fully dissolve cellulose.

Conclusions

Low-temperature swelling of cellulose in TFA substantially reduces recalcitrance of crystalline cellulose to both enzymatic digestion and catalytic conversion. In a closed system to prevent loss of fluorohydrocarbons, the relative ease of recovery and regeneration of TFA by distillation makes it a potentially useful agent in large-scale deconstruction of biomass, not only for enzymatic depolymerization but also for enhancing rates of catalytic conversion to biofuel components and useful bio-products.

Background

Lignin and the crystallinity of cellulose are considered major recalcitrance factors impeding the biological or chemical conversion of cellulose in biomass to biofuels or bio-based products [1, 2]. Cellulose microfibrils are long para-crystalline arrays of several dozen (1→4)-β-d-glucan chains with a degree of polymerization (DP) of up to 20,000 for secondary walls of lignocellulosic biomass [3,4,5]. Individual microfibrils synthesized at the plasma membrane surface are about 3 nm in diameter, but bundle into much larger macrofibrils of up to 30 nm or greater with crystalline continuity [6,7,8].

Mechanical disruption of the cellulosic source by ball milling can fragment macrofibrils and reduce crystallinity to a certain extent, thereby increasing sites of enzyme or catalyst accessibility [9,10,11]. Treatments with dilute acids improve enzymatic yields of fermentable sugars, but hydrolysis and loss of non-cellulosic sugars, decomposition of sugars at high temperatures, problems with acid recovery, and other environmental considerations prompted a search for alternatives [12,13,14,15]. Steam expansion at neutral temperatures reduced decomposition, and the separation of lignin and cellulose improved subsequent enzymatic digestion to fermentable sugars [16, 17]. Ammonia freeze-explosion (or fiber-expansion) (AFEX) pretreatment with high-pressure liquid anhydrous ammonia has been optimized for various biomass types to provide a clean stream of cellulose for fermentation and recovery of the ammonia [18,19,20]. AFEX swells biomass, enabling nearly complete enzymatic conversion of cellulose fermentable sugars [16]. The ammonia treatment extracts xylans and redistributes lignin to the surface of the cell walls, enhancing access of enzymes to cellulose through creation of large, porous networks [21]. Biomass treated with steam at high pressure and temperature alone is sufficient to enhance the yields of sugars from enzymatic digestion [22, 23].

Swelling of cellulose that occurs during either steam expansion or AFEX enhances final yield of sugar but does not enhance the time to completion, indicating that lignin interference with hydrolysis might be attenuated, but the crystallinity of cellulose remains a significant recalcitrance factor. Several classic methods have been employed to solubilize cellulose for improved saccharification yield, such as combinations of NaOH/urea or 85% phosphoric acid [24], but they are not without problems with cellulose decomposition or depolymerization and recovery of reagents. Molten ionic liquids [25], such as 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium (BMIM) chloride or 4-methylmorpholine 4-oxide (NMMO), solubilize cellulose at relatively low temperatures without inducing extensive modification [26,27,28]; the interaction of imidazolium-containing ILs better dissolves lignin in addition to generating amorphous cellulose from lignocellulosic biomass [29,30,31]. Because addition of water or ethanol results in precipitation of the cellulose, the ILs can be recovered [32, 33], and the decrystallized cellulose exhibits strongly enhanced enzymatic digestibility [28, 33]. Although ILs are favored as ‘green’ chemicals due to their low volatility and potentially low environmental impact, concerns remain about expense of the reagents and their recovery and regeneration costs at commercial scale [32, 34]. In addition to substantial improvements in biodigestibility of cellulose, bacterial strains engineered to digest polysaccharide substrates can convert these digestion products into fuel molecules [35].

An alternative to ILs to dissolve cellulose is trifluoroacetic acid [36, 37]. Its activity is unusual in that freezing temperatures drive solubilization by penetration of TFA diesters into the cellulose microfibrils, with some TFA monoesters forming with glucosyl residues of the cellulose chains [37]. Gentle heating cleaves the esters and produces gelatinized forms of cellulose. As with ionic liquids, decrystallized cellulose is recovered as a gel upon addition of an alcohol such as isopropanol or ethanol [38]. Our study here aimed to characterize the transition from crystalline to gelatinized cellulose, and to assess the minimum treatment needed to improve enzyme digestibility and chemical catalysis to biofuel molecules. We report here that partial dissolution of cellulose by subzero temperatures is sufficient to substantially enhance both enzymatic digestion and catalysis to fuel substrates.

Results

TFA solubilization and generation of gelatinized cellulose

Cotton linter cellulose (50 mg mL−1) maintained at − 20 °C for 15 h formed a thick, semi-solid slurry that melted into a clear solution between 2 and 5 h of subsequent incubation at 55 °C (Fig. 1a). Upon addition of five volumes of ethanol, the appearance of the mixture differed on the extent of heating, from a swollen opaque gel without heating to translucent gels after about 2.5 h at 55 °C (Fig. 1b). Similar behaviors were observed when reactions were scaled to 1 g of the cellulose in 30 mL of ice-cold TFA. These gelatinized forms persisted after several washes with 80% (v/v) ethanol and with water. Subsequent analyses were performed with either these ‘never-dried’ gels or paired samples that had been flash-frozen and lyophilized.

Fig. 1
figure 1

Physical behavior of cotton linter cellulose in TFA. a Dry cotton linter cellulose powder was suspended in TFA at − 20 °C and incubated for 15 h at that temperature. Samples were rapidly suspended by vortex mixing in five volumes of ethanol at ambient temperature (0 h) or heated to 55 °C for up to 5 h before addition of ethanol. b Appearance of cellulose in each of the treatments after several washes in 80% ethanol in water (v/v), and in water. c Weight fraction of TFA-soluble carbohydrate. Mole% of major monosaccharides xylose, glucose, and mannose were determined as alditol acetates by GC–MS [38, 55]

Monosaccharide analyses of cell wall material solubilized by the TFA treatment showed that very little material was lost from swollen cellulose, but heating resulted in gradual hydrolysis up about 12% weight fraction of the linter wall material by 5 h (Fig. 1c). Analysis of the soluble material after swelling showed that it was 56 mol% xylose and 44 mol% glucose, with a small amount of mannose. Upon heating at 55 °C, xylose was about 70 mol% of the soluble product after 1.2 h and decreased to 38 mol% after 5 h. Conversely, glucose increased from 26 to 48 mol% of the soluble fraction (Fig. 1c). The total mass of soluble xylose remains nearly constant over the heating period, likely because it is completely hydrolyzed within the first 1.2 h. The increase in total soluble product over extended heating is from the much slower hydrolysis of cellulose.

Analysis of crystalline and gelatinized cellulose by microscopy

Darkfield microscopy showed the gradual loss of the characteristic intense birefringence of crystalline cellulose to a more diffuse type, indicating conversion to an amorphous form (Fig. 2a). Upon freeze-drying, a proportion of the gelatinized cellulose reannealed into crystalline forms, as seen by reappearance of sharper birefringence (Fig. 2b). Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) showed the cotton linter cellulose particles to be rod-shaped with diameters of about 10 μm (Fig. 3a), with undulations on the cell surfaces of 0.5–1 μm in diameter (Fig. 3a). Particles of similar dimensions were observed after low-temperature swelling with TFA for 2 h at 0 °C or for 24 h at − 15 °C, with partial erosion and wrinkling of the surface, and some fragmentation (Fig. 3c), but substantial dissociation of macrofibril structure was observed compared to untreated materials (Fig. 3d). Heating of the swollen particles to gelatinize cellulose resulted in complete loss of cellular integrity and macrofibril structure, and showed a transition to a fused-and-porous morphology with increased times of heating (Fig. 3e, f).

Fig. 2
figure 2

Loss of birefringence upon treatment with TFA as determined by darkfield microscopy (upper panels) compared to gel forms observed by differential interference contrast (DIC) microscopy (lower panels). a Never-dried samples in water. b Freeze-dried. Times are hours of heating at 55 °C following low-temperature swelling at − 20 °C for 15 h

Fig. 3
figure 3

Changes in surface structure of cotton linter cellulose after low-temperature swelling and subsequent gelatinization at 55 °C. After each treatment, swollen and gelatinized materials were washed extensively in water and freeze-dried. a Untreated cotton fiber linter particles. Bar = 100 μm. b Higher magnification shows undulations in the surface of the fiber fragments. Bar = 10 μm. c Low-temperature swollen particles (− 15 °C for 24 h) show erosion and wrinkling of the surface. Bar = 100 μm. d Higher magnification shows potentially defibrillated macrofibrils. Bar = 10 μm. e Gelatinization of swollen fiber particles at 55 °C for 5 h results in loss of cellular integrity. Bar = 100 μm. f Higher magnification reveals loss of macrofibril structure. Bar = 10 μm

Loss of thermostability and resistance to acid hydrolysis of gelatinized cellulose

Thermogravimetry (TG) measures changes in weight during heating, and derivative thermogravimetry (DTG) measures variation in the rate of weight change during heating. Cotton linter cellulose gave rates of weight change consistent with cellulose decomposition, with a homogeneous peak of principal decomposition step between 300 and 360 °C [39, 40]. The initial weight loss initiated at 50 °C was attributed to the evaporation of free water in the samples. Loss of thermostability in TFA treatments was biphasic. Compared to untreated cellulose, a portion of low-temperature swollen cellulose showed slightly lower onset of weight loss temperatures, indicating the development of a different state in addition to that characteristic of the crystalline form (Fig. 4). However, two broad and overlapping decomposition curves were observed with gelatinized cellulose; the first began at about 250 °C and reached a peak at 290 °C, and a second peak began about 310 °C followed by the main decomposition peak at 340 °C. The intensity of lower temperature decomposition profile increased with TFA gelatinization (Fig. 4).

Fig. 4
figure 4

Differential thermogravimetry (DTG) biphasic behaviors of control, swollen, and gelatinized cotton linter cellulose. Cotton linter cellulose was low-temperature swollen at − 20 °C for 24 h. Swollen cellulose was gelatinized by heating at 55 °C for 5 h

About 22% of the cotton linter cellulose was hydrolyzed by 2 M TFA at 120 °C for 90 min (Fig. 5a), a treatment commonly used in general hydrolysis of non-cellulosic polysaccharides to monosaccharides [41]. In contrast, over 50% of the low-temperature swollen cellulose and 60–70% of the gelatinized cellulose was hydrolyzed by 2 M TFA (Fig. 5a). Freeze-dried gelatinized cellulose was generally more resistant to hydrolysis than were the never-dried samples. About 60% of the cotton linter cellulose was resistant to an alternative acetic-nitric digestion method [42], and low-temperature swollen cellulose after freeze-drying was equally resistant (Fig. 5a). Freeze-dried gelatinized cellulose was hydrolyzed by the acetic-nitric reagent to slightly higher extents than did TFA (Fig. 5a). To determine the extent of resistance to acid hydrolysis that was imparted by precipitation in ethanol, cellulose was solubilized in TFA and diluted immediately to 2 M for hydrolysis at 120 °C for 90 min. Such treatment resulted in rapid precipitation and even higher resistance to hydrolysis (Fig. 5a). Of the insoluble material remaining after TFA treatment, the vast majority of the monosaccharide solubilized by acid hydrolysis was glucose, increasing from 91 mol% in the material from low-temperature swelling to over 98 mol% after treatment for 5 h at 55 °C (Fig. 5b).

Fig. 5
figure 5

TFA hydrolysis of swollen and gelatinized cellulose generated by TFA. Cellulose samples were swollen in TFA at − 20 °C for 15 h and heated to 55 °C for up to 5 h before addition of four volumes of ethanol and washing in water. a 5 mg samples of freeze-dried (FD) and 0.5-mL suspensions of never-dried (ND) swollen and gelatinized cellulose were brought to 2-M TFA and heated to 120 °C for 90 min. Equivalent samples were hydrolyzed in acetic–nitric (A/N) reagent [38]. Control samples in TFA were diluted to 2 M with water and hydrolyzed at 120 °C (TFA direct). Additional controls were hydrolyzed with either 2 M TFA or A/N reagent. After hydrolysis, samples were centrifuged to pellet residual cellulose, and the TFA solutions dried under N2. Glucose equivalents were determined by a phenol–sulfuric assay [47, 57] in both TFA-soluble and insoluble fractions. Values represent mean and variance or S.D. of two to four samples. b Solubilized sugars from 2-M TFA hydrolysis at 120 °C were dried under a stream of nitrogen gas, and converted to alditol acetates for characterization by GC–MS [38, 55]. Values represent the means of two to four samples, with variance or S.D. within the width of the symbols

Relative loss in degree of polymerization during gelatinization

Estimations of degree of polymerization (DP) by reducing end analysis compared to total mass or methylation analysis to determine the ratio of t-Glucose to 4-Glucose residues were compromised by the high proportion of non-cellulosic glucans in the cotton linter cellulose. Dynamic light scattering of control and TFA-solubilized gave relative molecular diameters after dissolution in NMMO. Cotton linter cellulose gave several polydisperse distributions, with one of the highest molecular diameter peaks centered at 5000–6000 nm, a second broad distribution of lower molecular diameters, and a third distribution of small diameter material. The lower molecular diameter materials were absent from all TFA-treated samples. Molecular diameters of swollen cellulose decreased to 3000 nm, and heating at 55 °C lowered diameters to less than 1000 nm (Fig. 6).

Fig. 6
figure 6

Relative molecular diameters determined by dynamic light scattering of cellulose after treatment with TFA. Freeze-dried TFA-treated and control celluloses were dissolved at 10 mg mL−1 in 4-methylmorpholino-4-oxide hydrate (NMMO) at 90 °C for 4 h with stirring. Analyses were made in a sample chamber held at 85 °C. C control cotton linter cellulose; Times in hours are incubations at 55 °C after swelling at − 20 °C for 15 h

Analysis of crystalline and amorphous cellulose content by X-ray diffraction and FTIR spectroscopy

Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectra of air-dried cellulose incorporated in KBr disks gave two pronounced peaks at 3411 and 2896 cm−1 (Fig. 7), which were assigned to O–H stretches [43]. Absorbances in the O–H stretching region were higher in untreated and TFA-swollen cellulose than in TFA-swollen cellulose heated for 5 h at 55 °C (Fig. 7). The changes in FTIR spectra of gelatinized cellulose indicated a significant reduction in the density of hydrogen bonding within the regenerated cellulose. Absorbances around 1790 cm−1 were detected in the gelatinized samples, corresponding to carbonyls of trifluoroacetyl esters formed during heating [44]. However, no carbonyl esters from TFA were detected in 0- or 5-h samples that had been extensively washed and freeze-dried. We used FTIR microspectroscopy to examine differences in the carbohydrate fingerprint region as a result of TFA treatment in the cold and subsequently at 55 °C in freeze-dried materials. Spectra sampled from multiple areas of gold-plated slides were baseline-corrected and area-averaged between wavenumbers 800 and 1800 cm−1 before comparisons by digital subtraction or principal components analysis (PCA) (Fig. 8). Thirty spectra obtained from each of three samples (untreated, TFA-swollen cellulose before heating, and TFA-swollen cellulose after heating for 5 h) were averaged and then area-normalized. All three average spectra show peaks characteristic of cellulose at 1157, 1111, 1053, and 1018 cm−1. However, the amplitudes of C–C, C–O, and C–H stretches are relatively increased in both TFA-treated samples, indicating increased modes of these molecular vibrations. Digital subtraction of the untreated sample from either the 0 or 5 h samples showed relative enrichment of peaks at 1119, 1068, 1014–1022, 995, 960, and 891 cm−1 (Fig. 8b). Carillo et al. (2004) [42] have proposed that a peak at 895 cm−1 is diagnostic of crystalline cellulose I and is shifted to 893 cm−1 in cellulose II or amorphous cellulose. The peak at 891 cm−1 in the digital subtraction spectra may indicate more cellulose II or amorphous cellulose in the TFA-treated samples. Exploratory PCA of all 90 spectra showed that untreated samples could be readily discriminated from treated samples on PC1 (Fig. 8c) and that the loading for PC1 is similar to the digital subtraction spectra (Fig. 8d). Four PCs are sufficient for 100% classification of all three samples (Fig. 8d inset). Digital subtraction of TFA-swollen cellulose with 0 h heating from 5-h heating showed relative enrichment of peaks at 1157, 1119, 1072, and 1022 cm−1 that are not characteristic of crystalline cellulose.

Fig. 7
figure 7

FTIR adsorption spectrum of TFA-treated and untreated cellulose

Fig. 8
figure 8

FTIR analysis of crystalline, swollen, and gelatinized states of cotton linter cellulose. a Area-normalized averaged spectra of crystalline cellulose standard, and TFA-treated cellulose treated at − 20 °C for 15 h, with and without a subsequent treatment of 55 °C for 5 h. Each spectral line is the average of 25–30 technical replicates. b Principal Component Analysis of the individual spectra from each treatment. Each replicate is the sum of 128 co-added FT spectra that were area-normalized. c Subtraction spectra of the baseline-corrected and area-normalized averaged spectra shown in a. d Principal component loadings used in PC shown in b. Inset Percentage of correct classification of spectra with treatment with increasing PCs

Loss of crystallinity was also observed by X-ray diffraction, as the sharp crystalline reflections of cellulose Iβ are lost upon dissolution in TFA (Figs. 9 and 10). However, upon freeze-drying X-ray scattering indicates partial recrystallization into cellulose II (Fig. 9). Scattering angles at 2θ = 18°, 22.7°, and 34°, corresponding to the (110), (002), and (004) planes of cellulose Iβ [45,46,47], respectively, were well defined in the cotton linter cellulose but decreased in intensity and shifted in angle upon warming in TFA (Fig. 10). The crystallinity index (CrI) of untreated cellulose, determined as scattering angle of 22.5° relative to that at 18°, was 80%, consistent with the previous XRD analyses [48]. Low-temperature swelling of cellulose in TFA is sufficient to reduce the Segal crystallinity index (CrI) from 80% in the untreated sample to 30% at 0 °C for 2 h and 27% for cellulose swollen at − 15 °C for up to 24 h. When swollen cellulose was heated to 55 °C in TFA, the material became completely amorphous (Fig. 9), and when freeze-dried, the cellulose partially recrystallized as cellulose II (Figs. 9 and 10) with a CrI for cellulose II of 41–58% (2θ = 16°, 21.7°).

Fig. 9
figure 9

X-ray scattering of control, a swollen, b gelatinized, and c gelatinized and hydrolyzed (2 M TFA at 120 °C, 90 min) cotton linter cellulose. Crystalline cellulose Iβ is converted to cellulose II during gelatinization, precipitation, and freeze-drying

Fig. 10
figure 10

XRD spectra of crystalline, swollen, and gelatinized cellulose. Cotton linter cellulose was low-temperature swollen at − 20 °C for 24 h. Swollen cellulose was gelatinized by heating at 55 °C for 5 h

Rates of enzymatic hydrolysis of crystalline and gelatinized cellulose

Rates of hydrolysis of low-temperature swollen and gelatinized cellulose were substantially enhanced compared to untreated controls (Fig. 11a, b). Never-dried swollen and gelatinized celluloses were completely hydrolyzed by 12 h with cellulase cocktail (1.8 and 18 FPU/g glucan), while less than 50% of control cellulose was digested (Fig. 11a). Control cellulose approached completion only after 72 h. After freeze-drying, swollen cellulose was rendered more resistant to hydrolysis, whereas gelatinized cellulose remained completely hydrolyzed by 12 h (Fig. 11b). This is likely because the freeze-dried samples partially recrystallized to a greatly extent than the samples that were not freeze-dried, as shown by dark field microscopy (Fig. 2). Never-dried swollen and gelatinized cellulose were rapidly digested by moderate amounts of enzyme (18-FPU/g glucan, 15 mg protein/g glucan) to completion between 12 and 24 h, and even low enzyme loading (1.8-FPU/g glucan, 1.5-mg protein/g glucan) resulted in complete digestion by 72 h (Fig. 11a).

Fig. 11
figure 11

Rates of enzymatic hydrolysis of crystalline (C), swollen (0 h), and gelatinized (5 h) cellulose. Crystalline cellulose was swollen in TFA at − 20 °C for 15 h. Gelatinized cellulose was prepared from swollen cellulose by heating at 55 °C for 5 h. Cellic® Ctec2 (Novozymes) (18 or 1.8 FPU/g glucan) was added to 5 mg of cellulose samples in 2 mL of 50 mM sodium citrate and incubated at 50 °C for up to 72 h. Samples were withdrawn at designated intervals for assay cellulose and solubilized glucose [54]. Panel (a) shows samples that were not dried prior to enzymatic hydrolysis. Panel (b) shows samples that were freeze dried prior to hydrolysis

Behavior of crystalline, swollen, and gelatinized cellulose in catalytic conversion to biofuel precursors

Conversion of cotton linter cellulose catalyzed by maleic acid/AlCl3 to HMF and levulinic acid was substantially enhanced by TFA-induced conversion of cellulose from crystalline to amorphous form (Fig. 12) [49, 50]. Control experiments with untreated cellulose yielded only about 4 and 5% theoretical yield of HMF and levulinic acid, respectively. However, yields of HMF were at least twofold higher in low-temperature and gelatinized cellulose, with slightly higher amounts in low-temperature swollen but not heated samples (Fig. 12). Yields of levulinic acid were over eightfold higher (41% of theoretical yield) when cellulose swollen at − 15 °C for 24 h was followed by gelatinization. However, cellulose swollen at 0 °C for 2 h with TFA without gelatinization combined for highest HMF yield (14%) and relatively high levulinic acid yield (34.5%) compared to gelatinized samples (Fig. 12).

Fig. 12
figure 12

Yields of HMF and levulinic acid from crystalline, swollen, and gelatinized cellulose. Crystalline cellulose was suspended in TFA at − 20 °C for 15 h (0 h), with subsequent heating at 55 °C for up 5 h. Materials (100 mg) were suspended in 2 mL of 100 mM each of maleic acid and AlCl3; the reaction mixtures were heated to 180 °C and held at that temperature for 15 min. ND never-dried, FD freeze-dried. Levulinic acid yield is in blue, and HMF yield is in green. Error bars represent standard deviation for triplicates

Discussion

Low-temperature swelling of cellulose in TFA causes significant disruption of crystallinity, and solubilization at warm temperatures generates mostly amorphous cellulose after gelatinization in ethanol. TFA offers a milder operational temperature range (− 20 to 78 °C) compared to liquid ammonia, and a low boiling point (72.4 °C) enables recovery by distillation. Near anhydrous TFA causes less degradation of sugars compared to other mineral acids [51]. Zhao et al. [37] also reported decrystallization of cellulose when swollen for 3 h at 0 °C and then exposed to a vacuum (30 mTorr) at 105 °C for 2 days. Ethanol gelatinization preserves considerably more cellulose in an amorphous form than does dilution with water to 2 M for hydrolysis (Fig. 5).

As indicated by several physical analyses, changes in crystallinity upon treatment of cellulose with TFA and subsequent gelatinization are biphasic, giving two distinct alterations from crystallinity. Cellulose has a characteristic thermal decomposition profile that peaks between 340 and 360 °C [39]. The dense opaque gels made during low-temperature swelling retain intense birefringence, an indicator of crystallinity, whereas subsequent heating results in gelatinized cellulose whose birefringence becomes diffuse (Fig. 2). The DTG curves of swollen cellulose shift to slightly lower temperatures than untreated cellulose, but fully gelatinized cellulose decomposes at drastically lower temperatures (Fig. 4). The amorphous cellulose decomposition usually appears as a less pronounced shoulder in native cellulose instead of a well-defined peak [40]. Lower crystallinity and shorter cellulose chain length can accelerate the degradation process and reduce the thermal stability [52].

Two distinct states of cellulose from crystalline controls are also observed by principal components analysis of FTIR spectra from low-temperature swollen and gelatinized cellulose (Fig. 8) [53, 54]. Absorbances at 1790 cm−1 were detected in fresh heat gelatinized samples and correspond to the carbonyl group of trifluoroacetyl ester groups [44]. Part of this behavior might be attributed to two different interactions with TFA. While TFA diesters are suspected of disrupting crystallinity at cold temperatures, cellulose can be selectively trifluoroacetylated at the C6-hydroxyl groups in the TFA solution above ambient temperature (Fig. 7) [37, 44]. However, subsequent washing of the gelatinized cellulose with 80% ethanol in water (v/v) and then water results in loss of these esters, as detection of absorbance at 1790 cm−1 by these carbonyl esters is lost upon subsequent freeze-drying (Fig. 8). Taken together, the increased amplitudes in carbohydrate stretching observed in FTIR spectra and the X-ray diffraction data indicate that TFA treatment decreases cellulose crystallinity. Although some crystallites reform upon freeze-drying, these may be predominantly cellulose II crystals rather than cellulose I.

X-ray diffraction also indicates a loss of crystallinity of the cellulose during incubation in TFA at low temperature followed by conversion to cellulose II upon heating (gelatinization), precipitation, and freeze-drying (Fig. 9). The major peak of untreated and swollen cellulose is around 21.7° (Figs. 9 and 10). Gelatinized and freeze-dried cellulose show recrystallization as cellulose II. The significant structure changes could be traced by 2θ variation of (1 − 1 0) and (1 1 0). This is more clearly shown by XRD of residual crystalline cellulose after hydrolysis of the gelatinized cellulose by TFA at 120 °C for 90 min (Figs. 5a and 9c). The 2θ of (1 1 0) for cellulose II is 19.9°. A shoulder peak appears near to (1 1 0), that is (2 0 0) at 22.1°. The transition of cellulose Iβ to cellulose II gives rise to the shift of (1 − 1 0) from 15° to 12.2° and (1 1 0) shifts from 16.5° to 19.9°, very close to (2 0 0) [46, 47, 55, 56].

The two physical states of low-temperature swollen and gelatinized cellulose also result in altered degrees of resistance to acid hydrolysis. While 20% of untreated cellulose is hydrolyzed by hot 2-M TFA, an additional 30% of total mass is hydrolyzed in the dense opaque swollen cellulose, and yet, another 20% is hydrolysis in fully gelatinized cellulose (Fig. 5). In contrast, enzymatic digestion is enhanced substantially by low-temperature swelling (Fig. 11). Commercial cellulase was able to completely hydrolyze swollen cellulose within 72 h, even at the low loading of 1.8-FPU/g cellulose. Gelatinized cellulose, formed after heating at 55 °C, hydrolyzed at only a slightly faster rate. Untreated cellulose was 80% digested at the highest enzyme loading and only 40% digested at the lowest after 72 h.

Taken together, these data indicate that regenerated cellulose has more accessible cellulose compared to cellulose swollen at 0 °C, because levulinic acid is produced from HMF, which must first be made from the glucose hydrolyzed from the cellulose. A similar trend was observed in samples chilled to − 15 °C for 24 h with and without a dissolution step, but with a more significant levulinic acid difference in yield. All regenerated cellulose resulted in a higher levulinic acid yields compared to swollen cellulose. However, the differences between swollen and regenerated cellulose are far smaller than the difference between untreated cellulose and any treatment of cellulose with TFA. These data indicate that mild decrystallization of cellulose results in significantly more reactive cellulose for hydrolysis and conversion of the resultant glucose using acid catalysts.

Operating industrial-scale processes at 0 °C will require significant energy input for heat removal. However, the low boiling point of TFA allows for recovery of rejected waste heat from downstream cellulose conversion processes, which may represent a significant cost savings. Detailed economic analysis was beyond the scope of the work reported here. Additional efforts to examine this technology should focus on comparative techno-economic analyses with ionic liquid and other advanced pretreatments to clearly identify where cost savings can have the greatest impact.

Conclusions

Low-temperature swelling of cellulose TFA followed by gelatinization at warm temperatures generates amorphous cellulose that is readily hydrolyzed by acid. While low-temperature swelling retains significant crystalline structure, the alteration of crystallization alone is sufficient to significantly enhance both the enzymatic digestion and maleic acid/AlCl3-catalyzed conversion of cellulose to levulinic acid and HMF. A closed system of swelling cellulose in TFA and recovery in ethanol represents a cost-effective pretreatment that markedly enhances enzymatic hydrolysis and catalytic conversion to biofuel intermediates. Distillation and separation of TFA and ethanol allow safe regeneration and recycling of the TFA for continuous generation of modified cellulose.

Methods

Materials

Cotton linter cellulose (Sigmacell; product No. S5504T), maleic acid, and AlCl3·6H2O were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich. Trifluoroacetic acid (TFA, 99%) was purchased from Alfa Aesar and Sigma-Aldrich.

Cellulose swelling and gelatinization

Cotton linter cellulose was mixed thoroughly with ice-cold 99% TFA at 50 mg mL−1 in borosilicate glass tubes sealed with Teflon®-lined caps or scaled to 1-g preparations suspended in 30 mL of TFA in 50-mL Falcon tubes. Suspensions were placed at 0, − 15, or − 20 °C for up to 24 h before incubation at 55 °C for up to 5 h. After treatment, four volumes of ethanol were added with rapid vortex mixing to gel and precipitate the cellulose. The ethanol-precipitated gels were pelleted by centrifugation, and the supernatant liquid was transferred to a 4-mL screw-cap vial, 0.5 mL of t-butyl alcohol added to prevent decomposition, and the mixture was dried under a stream of warm air. The gels were washed with additional 80% ethanol in water, and this added to the supernatant fraction. The gels were washed with three times with water and either brought to 5-mg mL−1 water and stored at 4 °C (never-dried), or freeze-dried. For scaled up reactions, two volumes of ethanol were used to rinse the contents of the 50 mL Falcon tubes into a 250-mL beaker with rapid stirring to produce the cellulose gels. The cellulose gels were collected on glass-fiber filter disks (Whatman GF/D) and washed five times with four volumes of 80% ethanol to remove residual TFA. The filter cakes were resuspended in deionized water and then freeze-dried.

Darkfield and differential interference contrast microscopy

Cellulose samples were placed on glass microscope slides without additional treatment or staining. Images were captured using a Nikon C1 Plus microscope (Nikon, Tokyo, Japan) configured for either darkfield or differential interference contrast (DIC) illumination and using a SPOT RTKE CCD camera (Diagnostic Instruments, Sterling Heights, MI). FIJI (ImageJ) was used to rotate, crop, normalize brightness, and convert 16-bit color images to 8-bit grayscale images.

Scanning electron microscopy (SEM)

The surface morphology of cellulose samples was examined using a Hitachi S3400N (Tokyo, Japan) microscope with an accelerating voltage of 15 kV. Images showing surface morphologies of the cellulose were taken at 100 and 5000 magnifications. Before examination, a fine layer of gold was sprayed on samples by an ion sputter coater with a low deposition rate.

Thermogravimetric analysis (TGA)

Thermogravimetric analysis was performed on a SDT Q600 from TA Instruments (New Castle, DE USA) under Nitrogen flow (50 mL min−1). The samples weighing approximately 5 mg were packed in aluminum pans. The samples were tested from the ambient temperature to 700 °C at a heating rate of 20 °C min−1.

Hydrolysis of crystalline, swollen, and gelatinized cellulose

Samples (1 mg) of dry cellulosic materials or in 0.5 mL aqueous never-dried suspensions in 4-mL borosilicate glass vials were brought to 2-M TFA containing 500 nmoles of myo-inositol (internal standard), sealed with Teflon®-lined screw caps, and heated to 120 °C for 90 min with occasional shaking. After cooling, the remaining insoluble material was pelleted by centrifugation at 2500×g for 5 min. The clear supernatant liquid was transferred to a 4-mL glass vial and dried under a stream of N2 at 45 °C. The pellet was washed twice with water followed by centrifugation, and suspended in 0.8 mL of water. Samples were assayed for glucose equivalents by phenol–sulfuric assay [57].

To determine monosaccharide distribution, dried soluble fractions were hydrolyzed in 1 mL of 2-M TFA at 120 °C for 90 min, then 0.5 of tert-butyl alcohol was added, and the mixed was dried under a stream of nitrogen at 45 °C. A portion of the dried hydrolyzates were reduced with NaBH4 and 1-methylimidazole-catalyzed acetylated as described previously [41]. Alditol acetates of the monosaccharides recovered were identified and quantified by GLC–MS compared to the myo-inositol internal standard wall material. Derivatives were separated on a 0.25-mm × 30-m column of SP-2330 (Supelco, Bellefonte, PA). Temperature was held at 80 °C during injection, then ramped quickly to 170 °C at 25 °C min−1, and then to 240 °C at 5 °C min−1 with a 10 min hold at the upper temperature. Helium flow was 1 mL min−1 with splitless injection. Derivative structures were confirmed by electron-impact mass spectrometry [58].

Light-scattering determinations of relative molecular size

Crystalline and amorphous celluloses were mixed in about 3 g of the ionic liquid 4-methylmorpholino-4-oxide hydrate (NMMO) and heated for 4 h at 90 °C to produce a homogeneous molten mixture that was brought to 10 mg mL−1 final concentration. Light scattering measurements (Malvern Zetasizer DL, source) were made in 1 cm disposable cuvettes heated to 85 °C.

Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy

The structural changes of untreated and TFA-treated cellulose were investigated by FTIR spectroscopy using a Perkin Elmer Spotlight 400 FTIR spectrometer (Perkin Elmer, Waltham, MA, USA). The samples were oven dried at 105 °C for 5 h, mixed with KBr in a ratio of 1:200 (w/w), and pressed under vacuum to form pellets. The FTIR spectrum of the samples was recorded in the transmittance mode in the range of 4000–500 cm−1 at a spectral resolution of 4 cm−1 and 64 scans per sample.

FTIR microspectroscopy on dry cellulosic materials was essentially as described by McCann et al. [25]. Briefly, materials mounted in the wells of IR-reflective, gold-plated microscope slides (Thermo-Electron) were placed on the stage of a Nicolet Continuum series microscope accessory to a 670 IR spectrophotometer with a liquid nitrogen-cooled mercury–cadmium telluride detector (Thermo-Electron). Spectral collection in transflectance mode was made on cellulosic material within a 125 × 125 μm window. In transflectance, the beam is transmitted through the wall sample, reflected off the gold-plated slide, and then transmitted through the sample a second time. Spectra were co-added from 128 A collected with 8-cm−1 resolution. Each individual co-added spectrum from each sample was then area-averaged and baseline-corrected. Spectra from up to 30 samples were then averaged and used for digital subtraction.

Baseline-corrected and area-normalized data sets of spectra were then used in the chemometric analyses. The PCA was carried out with the WIN-DAS software [59]. LDA was used to develop a discriminative calibration model to classify spectra into groups. The distances between each observation were estimated from group centers. Mahalanobis distance was used as the distance metric [59] to measure the distance of each observation (spectrum) from each group center. LDA using squared Mahalanobis distance metrics was applied to the PCA scores of original data [59]. The derived quantities such as group centers and covariance matrices were calculated from the transformed observations, and the assignments to the respective class were then made.

X-ray diffraction (XRD)

The structural analysis of the samples was evaluated by X-ray diffraction (XRD) using a LabX XRD-6000 (Shimadzu, Kyoto, Japan) diffract meter with Cu Kα radiation source (λ = 1.54060 Å). The XRD patterns were obtained over the angular range 2θ = 10–40o in 0.04 degree per step. The empirical method proposed by Segal et al. [60] was used to calculate the crystalline index (CrI) of cellulose I in respect of 002 plane:

$${\text{CrI }} = \left( {\left( {I_{002} - I_{\text{am}} } \right)/I_{002} } \right) \times 100,$$

where CrI is the crystallinity index, I 002 is the maximum intensity of the (002) peak at 2θ = 22.7o, and I am is the intensity at 2θ = 18.0o. Additional X-ray patterns were collected using a 5-μ X-ray beam at GM/CA, beamline 23ID-B at APS at Argonne National Laboratory [61] with a sample to detector distance of 300 mm and X-ray wavelength of 1.033 Å. Calculation of 2θ for data from the GM/CA beamline (1.033 Å) was corrected to 1.54060 Å for comparison purposes in Fig. 9. The sharp reflections within diffraction patterns come from mica membrane onto which samples were mounted for experiment. These reflections had been masked out for the calculation of circularly averaged intensity.

Catalytic conversion of regenerated cellulose to HMF and levulinic acid

The native and regenerated cellulose were hydrolyzed and the resultant glucose was sequentially converted to HMF, and levulinic and formic acids using maleic acid and aluminum chloride as catalysts. Reaction procedures were previously reported by Zhang et al. [50, 62].

HPLC analysis

The concentrations of glucose, fructose, HMF, levulinic, and formic acids were analyzed by a Waters HPLC system, equipped with a Waters 1525 pump and Waters 2412 Refractive Index detector (Waters, Milford, MA). An HPX-87H AMINEX column (BioRAD, Hercules, CA) was used for separation with 5-mM aqueous H2SO4 and 5% (w/w) acetonitrile as the mobile phase at a flow rate of 0.6 mL/min. The acetonitrile was used to facilitate the separation of hexoses and maleic acid [63, 64]. The column temperature was maintained at 338 K. All concentrations of sugars and organic products in the aqueous phase were determined by external calibration standards.

Enzymatic hydrolysis of cellulose

Enzymatic hydrolysis experiments were performed with 5 mg suspended in 2 ml of 50-mM sodium citrate buffer, pH 5.0, containing 1 or 0.1-µL Cellic™ Ctec2 (18 or 1.8 FPU/g cellulose (corresponding to 15- or 1.5-μg protein/mg glucan) for TFA-treated and untreated cellulose. Enzymatic hydrolysis was carried out at 50 °C in a rolling hybridization oven at 250 rpm. Each experiment was performed in duplicate. During hydrolysis, samples were taken at predetermined intervals for analysis using HPLC. Remaining cellulose and soluble sugar were separated by centrifugation, and glucose equivalents in each were determined by a phenol–sulphuric assay [54].

Statistics analysis

All data collected were subject to the analysis of variance ANOVA (P < 0.05) using SPSS. All the analyses were carried out in duplicates.

Abbreviations

TFA:

trifluoroacetic acid

HMF:

5-hydroxymethylfurfural

HPLC:

high-performance liquid chromatography

FTIR:

Fourier transform infrared

XRD:

X-ray diffraction

SEM:

scanning electron microscopy

CrI:

crystallinity index

DP:

degree of polymerization

TGA:

thermogravimetric analysis

DTG:

derivative thermogravimetry

ANOVA:

analysis of variance

SPSS:

software package used for statistical analysis

References

  1. Wyman CE. Biomass ethanol: technical progress, opportunities, and commercial challenges. Annu Rev Energy Environ. 1999;24(1):189–226.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  2. Himmel ME, Ding S-Y, Johnson DK, Adney WS, Nimlos MR, Brady JW, Foust TD. Biomass recalcitrance: engineering plants and enzymes for biofuels production. Science. 2007;315(5813):804–7.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  3. Hessler LE, Merola GV, Berkley EE. Degree of polymerization of cellulose in cotton fibers. Text Res J. 1948;18(10):628–34.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  4. Schulz L, Seger B, Burchard W. Structures of cellulose in solution. Macromol Chem Phys. 2000;201(15):2008–22.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  5. Yamamoto M, Kuramae R, Yanagisawa M, Ishii D, Isogai A. Light-scattering analysis of native wood holocelluloses totally dissolved in LiCl–DMI solutions: high probability of branched structures in inherent cellulose. Biomacromolecules. 2011;12(11):3982–8.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  6. Donaldson L. Cellulose microfibril aggregates and their size variation with cell wall type. Wood Sci Technol. 2007;41(5):443.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  7. Zhao H, Kwak JH, Zhang ZC, Brown HM, Arey BW, Holladay JE. Studying cellulose fiber structure by SEM, XRD, NMR and acid hydrolysis. Carbohydr polym. 2007;68(2):235–41.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  8. Ding S-Y, Liu Y-S, Zeng Y, Himmel ME, Baker JO, Bayer EA. How does plant cell wall nanoscale architecture correlate with enzymatic digestibility? Science. 2012;338(6110):1055–60.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  9. Chang VS, Holtzapple MT. Fundamental factors affecting biomass enzymatic reactivity. Appl Biochem Biotechnol. 2000;84(1):5–37.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  10. Qu T, Zhang X, Gu X, Han L, Ji G, Chen X, Xiao W. Ball milling for biomass fractionation and pretreatment with aqueous hydroxide solutions. ACS Sustain Chem Eng. 2017;5(9):7733–42.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  11. Zhang X, Eren NM, Kreke T, Mosier NS, Engelberth AS, Kilaz G. Concentrated HCl catalyzed 5-(chloromethyl) furfural production from corn stover of varying particle sizes. BioEnergy Res. 2017;10:1–7.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  12. Wyman CE, Dale BE, Elander RT, Holtzapple M, Ladisch MR, Lee Y. Coordinated development of leading biomass pretreatment technologies. Biores Technol. 2005;96(18):1959–66.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  13. Marzialetti T, Valenzuela Olarte MB, Sievers C, Hoskins TJ, Agrawal PK, Jones CW. Dilute acid hydrolysis of Loblolly pine: a comprehensive approach. Ind Eng Chem Res. 2008;47(19):7131–40.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  14. Li C, Knierim B, Manisseri C, Arora R, Scheller HV, Auer M, Vogel KP, Simmons BA, Singh S. Comparison of dilute acid and ionic liquid pretreatment of switchgrass: biomass recalcitrance, delignification and enzymatic saccharification. Biores Technol. 2010;101(13):4900–6.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  15. Xu J, Zhang X, Sharma-Shivappa RR, Eubanks MW. Gamagrass varieties as potential feedstock for fermentable sugar production. Biores Technol. 2012;116:540–4.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  16. Mosier N, Wyman C, Dale B, Elander R, Lee Y, Holtzapple M, Ladisch M. Features of promising technologies for pretreatment of lignocellulosic biomass. Biores Technol. 2005;96(6):673–86.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  17. Donohoe BS, Decker SR, Tucker MP, Himmel ME, Vinzant TB. Visualizing lignin coalescence and migration through maize cell walls following thermochemical pretreatment. Biotechnol Bioeng. 2008;101(5):913–25.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  18. Dale BE, Moreira MJ. Freeze-explosion technique for increasing cellulose hydrolysis. In: Biotechnology bioenergy Symposium (United States). Fort Collins: Colorado State Univ.; 1982.

  19. Dale B, Henk L, Shiang M. Fermentation of lignocellulosic materials treated by ammonia freeze-explosion. Dev Ind Microbiol. 1984;26:223–33.

    Google Scholar 

  20. Teymouri F, Laureano-Perez L, Alizadeh H, Dale BE. Optimization of the ammonia fiber explosion (AFEX) treatment parameters for enzymatic hydrolysis of corn stover. Biores Technol. 2005;96(18):2014–8.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  21. Chundawat SP, Donohoe BS, da Costa Sousa L, Elder T, Agarwal UP, Lu F, Ralph J, Himmel ME, Balan V, Dale BE. Multi-scale visualization and characterization of lignocellulosic plant cell wall deconstruction during thermochemical pretreatment. Energy Environ Sci. 2011;4(3):973–84.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  22. Saddler JN, Ernest K, Mes-Hartree M, Levitin N, Brownell HH. Utilization of enzymatically hydrolyzed wood hemicelluloses by microorganisms for production of liquid fuels. Appl Environ Microbiol. 1983;45(1):153–60.

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  23. Schultz TP, Biermann CJ, McGinnis GD. Steam explosion of mixed hardwood chips as a biomass pretreatment. Ind Eng Chem Prod Res Dev. 1983;22(2):344–8.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  24. Kuo C-H, Lee C-K. Enhancement of enzymatic saccharification of cellulose by cellulose dissolution pretreatments. Carbohydr Polym. 2009;77(1):41–6.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  25. McCann MC, Defernez M, Urbanowicz BR, Tewari JC, Langewisch T, Olek A, Wells B, Wilson RH, Carpita NC. Neural network analyses of infrared spectra for classifying cell wall architectures. Plant Physiol. 2007;143(3):1314–26.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  26. Swatloski RP, Spear SK, Holbrey JD, Rogers RD. Dissolution of cellose with ionic liquids. J Am Chem Soc. 2002;124(18):4974–5.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  27. Weiying LCZAL, Runcang S: Dissolution of Cellulose in Novel Green Solvent Ionic Liquids and Its Application [J]. Progress in Chemistry 2009, 9:012.

  28. Zhao H, Jones CL, Baker GA, Xia S, Olubajo O, Person VN. Regenerating cellulose from ionic liquids for an accelerated enzymatic hydrolysis. J Biotechnol. 2009;139(1):47–54.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  29. Kilpeläinen I, Xie H, King A, Granstrom M, Heikkinen S, Argyropoulos DS. Dissolution of wood in ionic liquids. J Agric Food Chem. 2007;55(22):9142–8.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  30. Singh S, Simmons BA, Vogel KP. Visualization of biomass solubilization and cellulose regeneration during ionic liquid pretreatment of switchgrass. Biotechnol Bioeng. 2009;104(1):68–75.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  31. Papa G, Varanasi P, Sun L, Cheng G, Stavila V, Holmes B, Simmons BA, Adani F, Singh S. Exploring the effect of different plant lignin content and composition on ionic liquid pretreatment efficiency and enzymatic saccharification of Eucalyptus globulus L. mutants. Biores Technol. 2012;117:352–9.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  32. Blanch HW, Simmons BA, Klein-Marcuschamer D. Biomass deconstruction to sugars. Biotechnol J. 2011;6(9):1086–102.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  33. Shill K, Padmanabhan S, Xin Q, Prausnitz JM, Clark DS, Blanch HW. Ionic liquid pretreatment of cellulosic biomass: enzymatic hydrolysis and ionic liquid recycle. Biotechnol Bioeng. 2011;108(3):511–20.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  34. F Fernandez J, Neumann J, Thoming J. Regeneration, recovery and removal of ionic liquids. Curr Org Chem. 2011;15(12):1992–2014.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  35. Bokinsky G, Peralta-Yahya PP, George A, Holmes BM, Steen EJ, Dietrich J, Lee TS, Tullman-Ercek D, Voigt CA, Simmons BA. Synthesis of three advanced biofuels from ionic liquid-pretreated switchgrass using engineered Escherichia coli. Proc Natl Acad Sci. 2011;108(50):19949–54.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  36. Zhao H, Holladay JE, Kwak JH, Zhang ZC. A new route to improved glucose yields in cellulose hydrolysis. J Biobased Mater Bioenergy. 2007;1(2):210–4.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  37. Zhao H, Holladay JE, Kwak JH, Zhang ZC. Inverse temperature-dependent pathway of cellulose decrystallization in trifluoroacetic acid. J Phys Chem B. 2007;111(19):5295–300.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  38. Dong D, Sun J, Huang F, Gao Q, Wang Y, Li R. Using trifluoroacetic acid to pretreat lignocellulosic biomass. Biomass Bioenergy. 2009;33(12):1719–23.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  39. Yang H, Yan R, Chen H, Lee DH, Zheng C. Characteristics of hemicellulose, cellulose and lignin pyrolysis. Fuel. 2007;86(12):1781–8.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  40. Poletto M, Zattera AJ, Forte MM, Santana RM. Thermal decomposition of wood: influence of wood components and cellulose crystallite size. Biores Technol. 2012;109:148–53.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  41. Gibeaut D. Tracing the biosynthesis of the cell wall in intact cells and plants. Selective turnover and alteration of cytoplasmic and cell wall polysaccharides of proso millet cells in liquid culture and Zea mays seedlings. Plant Physiol. 1991;97:551–61.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  42. Carrillo F, Colom X, Suñol JJ, Saurina J. Structural FTIR analysis and thermal characterization of lyocell and viscose-type fibres. Eur Polym J. 2004;40:2229–34.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  43. Ciolacu D, Ciolacu F, Popa VI. Amorphous cellulose—structure and characterization. Cellul Chem Technol. 2011;45(1):13.

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  44. Hasegawa M, Isogai A, Onabe F, Usuda M. Dissolving states of cellulose and chitosan in trifluoroacetic acid. J Appl Polym Sci. 1992;45(10):1857–63.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  45. French AD, Cintrón MS. Cellulose polymorphy, crystallite size, and the Segal crystallinity index. Cellulose. 2013;20(1):583–8.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  46. Liu J, Inouye H, Venugopalan N, Fischetti RF, Gleber SC, Vogt S, Cusumano JC, Im Kim J, Chapple C, Makowski L. Tissue specific specialization of the nanoscale architecture of Arabidopsis. J Struct Biol. 2013;184(2):103–14.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  47. Liu J, Im Kim J, Cusumano JC, Chapple C, Venugopalan N, Fischetti RF, Makowski L. The impact of alterations in lignin deposition on cellulose organization of the plant cell wall. Biotechnol Biofuels. 2016;9(1):126.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  48. Park S, Baker JO, Himmel ME, Parilla PA, Johnson DK. Cellulose crystallinity index: measurement techniques and their impact on interpreting cellulase performance. Biotechnol Biofuels. 2010;3(1):10.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  49. Chen L, Li J, Lu M, Guo X, Zhang H, Han L. Integrated chemical and multi-scale structural analyses for the processes of acid pretreatment and enzymatic hydrolysis of corn stover. Carbohydr Polym. 2016;141:1–9.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  50. Zhang X, Hewetson BB, Mosier NS. Kinetics of maleic acid and aluminum chloride catalyzed dehydration and degradation of glucose. Energy Fuels. 2015;29(4):2387–93.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  51. Brodeur G, Yau E, Badal K, Collier J, Ramachandran K, Ramakrishnan S. Chemical and physicochemical pretreatment of lignocellulosic biomass: a review. Enzyme Res. 2011;2011:7.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  52. Kim U-J, Eom SH, Wada M. Thermal decomposition of native cellulose: influence on crystallite size. Polym Degrad Stab. 2010;95(5):778–81.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  53. Carrillo F, Colom X, Sunol J, Saurina J. Structural FTIR analysis and thermal characterisation of lyocell and viscose-type fibres. Eur Polym J. 2004;40(9):2229–34.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  54. Kljun A, Benians TA, Goubet F, Meulewaeter F, Knox JP, Blackburn RS. Comparative analysis of crystallinity changes in cellulose I polymers using ATR-FTIR, X-ray diffraction, and carbohydrate-binding module probes. Biomacromol. 2011;12(11):4121–6.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  55. Nishiyama Y, Langan P, Chanzy H. Crystal structure and hydrogen-bonding system in cellulose Iβ from synchrotron X-ray and neutron fiber diffraction. J Am Chem Soc. 2002;124(31):9074–82.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  56. Langan P, Nishiyama Y, Chanzy H. X-ray structure of mercerized cellulose II at 1 Å resolution. Biomacromol. 2001;2(2):410–6.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  57. DuBois M, Gilles KA, Hamilton JK, Rebers Pt, Smith F. Colorimetric method for determination of sugars and related substances. Anal Chem. 1956;28(3):350–6.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  58. Carpita NC, Shea EM. Linkage structure of carbohydrates by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GCMS) of partially methylated alditol acetates: analysis of carbohydrates by GLC and MS. In: Biermann CJ, McGinnis GD, editors. Analysis of Carbohydrates by GLC and MS. Boca Raton: CRC Press, Inc. 1989; p. 157–216.

  59. Kemsley EK. Discriminant analysis and class modelling of spectroscopic data. Chichester: Wiley; 1998.

    Google Scholar 

  60. Segal L, Creely J, Martin A Jr, Conrad C. An empirical method for estimating the degree of crystallinity of native cellulose using the X-ray diffractometer. Text Res J. 1959;29(10):786–94.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  61. Xu S, Keefe LJ, Mulichak A, Yan L, Alp EE, Zhao J, Fischetti RF. Mini-beam collimator applications at the advanced photon source. Nucl Instrum Methods Phys Res Sect A. 2011;649(1):104–6.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  62. Zhang X, Murria P, Jiang Y, Xiao W, Kenttämaa HI, Abu-Omar MM, Mosier NS. Maleic acid and aluminum chloride catalyzed conversion of glucose to 5-(hydroxymethyl) furfural and levulinic acid in aqueous media. Green Chem. 2016;18(19):5219–29.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  63. Gardner K, Blackwell J. The structure of native cellulose. Biopolymers. 1974;13(10):1975–2001.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  64. Lu Y, Mosier NS. Biomimetic catalysis for hemicellulose hydrolysis in corn stover. Biotechnol Prog. 2007;23(1):116–23.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

Download references

Authors’ contributions

TMS designed and performed experiments on conditions for generating amorphous cellulose and comparison of never-dried and freeze-dried states. WHX and XMZ designed and performed experiments on scaled up the TFA process, generated amorphous cellulose, performed XRD analyses, and conducted experiments on enzymatic saccharification, and HMF and levulinic acid synthesis. BSD performed darkfield and DIC microscopy on the cellulose samples. ATO and MCM performed FTIR analyses. JL and LM performed X-ray diffraction analyses. TH, YZ, and TZ performed SEM and DTG analyses. NCC and NSM assisted in design and supervision of the experiments, and edited the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Acknowledgements

This material is based upon work supported as part of the Center for Direct Catalytic Conversion of Biomass to Biofuels (C3Bio), an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, and Award Number DE-SC0000997.

TMS work at Purdue University was supported in part by Coordenação para a Pesquisa de Nível Superior—CAPES, for the financial support (Process BEX-10734/13-9).

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Availability of supporting data

There are no supporting data.

Consent for publication

All authors have approved the manuscript to be published.

Ethics approval and consent to participate

Not applicable.

Publisher’s Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Nathan S. Mosier.

Rights and permissions

Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Shiga, T.M., Xiao, W., Yang, H. et al. Enhanced rates of enzymatic saccharification and catalytic synthesis of biofuel substrates in gelatinized cellulose generated by trifluoroacetic acid. Biotechnol Biofuels 10, 310 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13068-017-0999-2

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13068-017-0999-2

Keywords