Document details

Sugarcane straw hemicellulose extraction by autohydrolysis for cosmetic applications

Author(s): Pereira, Maria João ; Pedrosa, Sílvia S. ; Costa, Joana R. ; Carvalho, Maria João ; Neto, Tânia ; Oliveira, Ana L. ; Pintado, Manuela ; Madureira, Ana Raquel

Date: 2025

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.14/52995

Origin: Veritati - Repositório Institucional da Universidade Católica Portuguesa

Subject(s): Autohydrolysis; Cosmetic potential; Hemicellulose valorization; Sugarcane straw; XOS production


Description

Sugarcane is a popular crop whose cultivation generates a wide range of by-products. The aim was to optimize the hydrothermal extraction of hemicellulose from sugarcane straw using response-surface methods with a two-factor composite design and to assess its functional qualities. Three process parameters were subject to optimization: solid/liquid ratio (1:6–1:18), temperature (143–186 °C), and extraction time (20–60 min). A xylooligosaccharide (XOS)-enriched extract was characterized regarding its chemical composition, molecular weight, and antioxidant and antimicrobial potential. The optimized extraction yield was 24.46 g/100 g of straw with a polymerization degree of 17.40. Both hemicellulose and XOS demonstrated notable antioxidant properties, with antioxidant effects of 73% and 85%, respectively. Regarding skin enzyme activity, hemicellulose inhibited elastase by more than 50%, while XOS showed no significant effect. However, both extracts exhibited collagenase (MMP1) inhibition comparable to the positive control. In terms of production feasibility, the estimated costs were 130.5 EUR/kg for hemicellulose and 272.5 EUR/kg for XOS. Overall, the optimized XOS-enriched sugarcane straw extract demonstrated promising anti-aging, antioxidant, and preservative properties, highlighting its potential for cosmetic applications.

Document Type Research article
Language English
Contributor(s) Veritati
CC Licence
facebook logo  linkedin logo  twitter logo 
mendeley logo

Related documents

No related documents