Abstract :
[en] Enzymatically destarched wheat bran (DWB) contained 13.8% of arabinose and 23.1% xylose. Up to a maximum of 70% of the arabinose was progressively released from DWB when heated at 80 or 100°C in media acidified with HCl. Whereas microwave irradiation at higher temperatures in pressure vessels could lead to higher yields of extraction. A Box-Behnken experimental design established an efficient model describing the effects of temperature, irradiation duration and pH on arabinose extraction. The pH appeared as the most important factor of the process. 4-5 min of microwave heating at 150ºC and pH 1 appeared as a fast and highly efficient method to recover more than 90% of the arabinose of DWB. When plotting the percentages of arabinose against the combined severity factors LogR’0 (calculated from the temperature/duration/pH conditions applied), two different fitting profiles were obtained for both the heating techniques. Under microwave heating, high free xylose’s release could also occur. The experimental design led to a quadratic model predicting the release of xylose from DWB. A range of conditions enabled to minimize xylose and hydrolyze around 50% of the total arabinose, yielding a high purity fraction. An alternative would be to release more than 90% of both arabinose and xylose, for further arabinose purification or for a common valorization of both pentoses.
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