8 research outputs found
A novel hybrid organosolv: steam explosion method for the efficient fractionation and pretreatment of birch biomass
Background:
The main role of pretreatment is to reduce the natural biomass recalcitrance and thus enhance sac-
charification yield. A further prerequisite for efficient utilization of all biomass components is their efficient fractiona-
tion into well-defined process streams. Currently available pretreatment methods only partially fulfill these criteria.
Steam explosion, for example, excels as a pretreatment method but has limited potential for fractionation, whereas
organosolv is excellent for delignification but offers poor biomass deconstruction.
Results:
In this article, a hybrid method combining the cooking and fractionation of conventional organosolv pre
-
treatment with the implementation of an explosive discharge of the cooking mixture at the end of pretreatment was
developed. The effects of various pretreatment parameters (ethanol content, duration, and addition of sulfuric acid)
were evaluated. Pretreatment of birch at 200
°C with 60%
v/v ethanol and 1%
w/w
biomass
H
2
SO
4
was proven to be the
most efficient pretreatment condition yielding pretreated solids with 77.9%
w/w cellulose, 8.9%
w/w hemicellulose,
and 7.0
w/w lignin content. Under these conditions, high delignification of 86.2% was demonstrated. The recovered
lignin was of high purity, with cellulose and hemicellulose contents not exceeding 0.31 and 3.25%
w/w, respectively,
and ash to be <
0.17%
w/w in all cases, making it suitable for various applications. The pretreated solids presented
high saccharification yields, reaching 68% at low enzyme load (6
FPU/g) and complete saccharification at high
enzyme load (22.5
FPU/g). Finally, simultaneous saccharification and fermentation (SSF) at 20%
w/w solids yielded an
ethanol titer of 80
g/L after 192
h, corresponding to 90% of the theoretical maximum.
Conclusions:
The novel hybrid method developed in this study allowed for the efficient fractionation of birch
biomass and production of pretreated solids with high cellulose and low lignin contents. Moreover, the explosive dis-
charge at the end of pretreatment had a positive effect on enzymatic saccharification, resulting in high hydrolyzability
of the
pretreated solids and elevated ethanol titers in the
following high-gravity SSF. To the best of our knowledge,
the ethanol concentration obtained with this method is the highest so far for birch biomass
High yield of second-generation ethanol in an ionic Liquid-Cellulase integrated system for single-step processing of empty fruit bunch
Improved conversion efficiencies for n-fatty acid reduction to primary alcohols by the solventogenic acetogen “Clostridium ragsdalei”
High Titer Ethanol Production from Combined Alkaline/Alkaline Hydrogen Peroxide Pretreated Bamboo at High Solid Loading
Critical factors affecting the integration of biomass gasification and syngas fermentation technology
Gasification-fermentation is a thermochemical-biological platform for the production of fuels and chemicals. Biomass is gasified at high temperatures to make syngas, a gas composed of CO, CO2, H2, N2 and other minor components. Syngas is then fed to anaerobic microorganisms that convert CO, CO2 and H2 to alcohols by fermentation. This platform offers numerous advantages such as flexibility of feedstock and syngas composition and lower operating temperature and pressure compared to other catalytic syngas conversion processes. In comparison to hydrolysis-fermentation, gasification-fermentation has a major advantage of utilizing all organic components of biomass, including lignin, to yield higher fuel production. Furthermore, syngas fermentation microorganisms do not require strict CO:H2:CO2 ratios, hence gas reforming is not required. However, several issues must be addressed for successful deployment of gasification-fermentation, particularly those that involve the integration of gasification and fermentation. Most previous reviews have focused only on either biomass gasification or syngas fermentation. In this review, the critical factors that affect the integration of biomass gasification with syngas fermentation, such as carbon conversion efficiency, effect of trace gaseous species, H2 to CO ratio requirements, and microbial preference of carbon substrate, are thoroughly discussed
