“…Although a number of pretreatment techniques operated at severe conditions (e.g., steam explosion and hot water pretreatment, 160-240 • C, 5-45 min, pretreatment severity factor (log R 0 ) of 2.8-4.8) were effective at enhancing enzymatic hydrolysis of the pretreated samples, they had high energy consumption and produced enzyme-inhibiting by-products as compared to those observed at mild conditions (e.g., acid pretreatment, 120 • C, 5-45 min, log R 0 of 1.3-2.2) [4,20,21]. Some other processes with less by-product formation and energy requirement (e.g., biological pretreatment at room temperature) can also improve bioconversion, but these processes are typically time-consuming and/or consume sugars of raw stalks during the pretreatment [2,11]. Up to now, there is no one strategy that could well meet all requirements for the ideal pretreatment.…”