Research Abstract

Citation

Mohagheghi, A., Tucker, M., Grohmann, K., and C. Wyman, High solids simultaneous saccharification and fermentation of pretreated wheat straw to ethanol. Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology 33: 67-81, 1992.

Abstract

Wheat straw was pretreated with dilute (0.5%) sulfuric acid at 140°C for 1h. Pretreated straw solids were washed with deionized water to neutrality and then stored frozen at -20°C. The approximate composition of the pretreated straw solids was 64% cellulose, 33% lignin, and 2% xylan. The cellulose in the pretreated wheat straw solids was converted to ethanol in batch simultaneous saccharification and fermentation experiments at 37°C using cellulase enzyme from Trichoderma reesei (Fenencor 150L) with or without supplementation with ß-glucosidase from Asperfillus niger (Novozyme 188) to produce gluscose sugar and the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae to ferment the glucose into ethanol. The initial cellulose concentrations were adjusted to 7.5, 10, 12.5, 15, 17.5 and 20% (w/w). Since wheat straw particles do not form slurries at these concentrations and cannot be mixed with conventional impeller mixers used in laboratory fermenters, a simple rotary fermenter was designed and fabricated for these experiments. The results of the simultaneous saccharification and fermentation (SSF) experiments indicate that the cellulose in pretreated wheat straw can be efficiently fermented into ethanol for up to a 15% cellulose concentration (24.4% straw concentration). Above this concentration, the cells lose their viability apparently because of ethanol inhibition. The maximum ethanol concentration achieved of 57g/L with 20.2% straw concentration (12.5% cellulose) yielded the highest sugar productivity of 1.27 g/Kg·h ethanol productivity of 0.62 g/Kg·h along with a combined ethanol and sugar yield of 70%. Index Entries: Ethanol; fermentation; wheat straw.

Country, State, District, etc.

United States, Colorado

Language

English

Material

wheat straw

Use category

ethanol production
 
Home    Introduction
Alternative Uses    Building with Straw Bales
Related Legislation    Technology
Technology    Searchable Database
Email
California Rice Commission