CONTENT OF LIGNIN IN THE LICORICE ROOT RESIDUES B. B. Abduazimov, R.M. Khalilov S.Yu. Yunusov Institute of the Chemistry of Plant Substances Academy of sciences of the Republic of Uzbekistan st. Mirzo-Ulugbek, 77, 100170 Tashkent By estimates of the Regional Program for Sustainable Agricultural Development in
Central Asia and Caucasus, over 70 per cent of licorice harvested and prepared in
Uzbekistan exported abroad, including China, Germany, France and South Korea.
Uzbekistan exported 2281.05 tons of licorice roots to China in 2010. According to the
chamber of Commerce and industry of Uzbekistan, more than thirty enterprises and
companies with different forms of ownership are engaged in harvesting and processing
of licorice root in various regions of Uzbekistan. Natural reserves of licorice root are
most actively due to climatic features growing in the south in the territory of
Surkhandarya, Kashkadarya regions, north-west in the Republic of Karakalpakstan and
the Khorezm region [1]. The significant part of the biomass is remains as a residue after
the extraction of glycyrrhizin. According to the latest data, about more than thousand
tons of licorice roots are processed inside Uzbekistan.
The key component of interest for the employing of licorice is glycyrrhizin or
glycyrrhizin acid. The extraction of glycyrrhizin is often performed using an aqua-
ethanol solution at high temperatures. Applications in traditional and herbal medicine
are particularly related to the inhibitory effect to the action of
Helicobacter pylori ,
therefore working as a liver protector, due to flavonoids found in licorice root.
The current work we examined lignin quantity of residues of licorice roots taken
from the factories, processed by water and aqua-ethanol extraction at high temperature.
Common quantification of lignin mainly relies of sulfuric acid hydrolysis known as
Klason-lignin analysis [2]. This method is achieved in the industry and commonly in
biomass refinery processes.
Our study demonstrates that residues content 29.84±0.89 % lignin. and 5.09±0.21 %
ash. This quantitative content of lignin in the residues is observed mainly in softwood.
Reminding, lignin is the second most abundant natural polymer and the leading
natural source of phenolic compounds. The value of lignin as naturally renewable
source has significant potential in the field of biorefining to produce value-added such
as aromatic organic products, carbon nanofibers, ameliorant, grow stimulator, fertilizers,
fuel briquettes etc. In the following investigations we will study possible way of
valorizations of lignin in its unmodified form or after modifications. In future,
producing medicine from extracts and conversion of residues for agricultural protectors
will increase the profitability of agricultural and phytochemical enterprises in the
regions of Uzbekistan.