STRUCTURE OF A HEMICELLULOSE FROM MAPLE WOOD PREVIOUSLY EXTRACTED BY LIQUID AMMONIA

Abstract
The extraction of maple wood meal with anhydrous liquid ammonia under pressure near 20° altered the wood in such a way that an additional small amount of lignin could be extracted with ethanol, and 1.9% of crude hemicelluloses with hot water. An additional 0.25% of nitrogen was retained, apparently as insoluble amides, by the residual wood. After elimination of pectic material by acetylation, the three subtractions of the hemicellulose acetate had identical specific rotations of −61 ± 1° in chloroform; all three corresponded in composition to a combination of one methylglucuronic anhydride to six anhydroxylose units. A conventional study by the methylation method suggested that the hemicellulose was a branched-chain structure averaging four anhydroxylose units linked 1—4, with one also substituted in the second position, and another linked 1—3.

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