The ultrastructural organization of cellulose elementary fibrils (EFs) in wood cell wall is considered to be the prime factor regulating the material characteristics of wood in micro to macro levels and the conversion of delignified wood fibers into various products. Specifically, the complex assembly of EFs in wood cell wall limits its swellability, solubility, and reactivity, for example, in dissolution of cellulose for regeneration of textile fibers, fibril separation for the manufacture of nanocellulose, and enzymatic hydrolysis of cellulose into sugars for their subsequent fermentation to various products, like ethanol for future fossil fuels replacement. Here cryo-transmission electron tomography was applied on ultrathin spruce wood s...
Cellulose makes up for most of the material in the lignocellulosic’s cell wall, and it could provide...
Deconstruction of lignocellulosic plant cell walls to fermentable sugars by thermochemical and/or bi...
Recent advances in our understanding of the molecular control of secondary cell wall (SCW) formation...
The ultrastructural organization of cellulose elementary fibrils (EFs) in wood cell wall is consider...
The woody secondary cell walls of plants are the largest repository of renewable carbon biopolymers ...
Lignocellulose biomass has a tremendous potential as renewable biomaterials for fostering the “bio-b...
The macromolecular organization of the secondary wall of the cells from tree xylem is in large part ...
Knowledge of the ultrastructural arrangement within wood fibres is important for understanding the m...
Fundamental insights into the macromolecular architecture of plant cell walls will elucidate new str...
The structure of cellulose microfibrils in wood is not known in detail, despite the abundance of cel...
In the native wood cell wall, cellulose microfibrils are highly aligned and organized in the seconda...
In plant cell wall, cellulose chains are organized into perfect stereoregular configuration called m...
The woody secondary cell walls of plants are the largest repository of renewable carbon biopolymers ...
In trees, a-few-nanometers-wide crystalline fibrils of cellulose are tightly bundled with other biop...
Cellulose makes up for most of the material in the lignocellulosic’s cell wall, and it could provide...
Cellulose makes up for most of the material in the lignocellulosic’s cell wall, and it could provide...
Deconstruction of lignocellulosic plant cell walls to fermentable sugars by thermochemical and/or bi...
Recent advances in our understanding of the molecular control of secondary cell wall (SCW) formation...
The ultrastructural organization of cellulose elementary fibrils (EFs) in wood cell wall is consider...
The woody secondary cell walls of plants are the largest repository of renewable carbon biopolymers ...
Lignocellulose biomass has a tremendous potential as renewable biomaterials for fostering the “bio-b...
The macromolecular organization of the secondary wall of the cells from tree xylem is in large part ...
Knowledge of the ultrastructural arrangement within wood fibres is important for understanding the m...
Fundamental insights into the macromolecular architecture of plant cell walls will elucidate new str...
The structure of cellulose microfibrils in wood is not known in detail, despite the abundance of cel...
In the native wood cell wall, cellulose microfibrils are highly aligned and organized in the seconda...
In plant cell wall, cellulose chains are organized into perfect stereoregular configuration called m...
The woody secondary cell walls of plants are the largest repository of renewable carbon biopolymers ...
In trees, a-few-nanometers-wide crystalline fibrils of cellulose are tightly bundled with other biop...
Cellulose makes up for most of the material in the lignocellulosic’s cell wall, and it could provide...
Cellulose makes up for most of the material in the lignocellulosic’s cell wall, and it could provide...
Deconstruction of lignocellulosic plant cell walls to fermentable sugars by thermochemical and/or bi...
Recent advances in our understanding of the molecular control of secondary cell wall (SCW) formation...