scholarly journals A high solids field-to-fuel research pipeline to identify interactions between feedstocks and biofuel production

2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Meenaa Chandrasekar ◽  
Leela Joshi ◽  
Karleigh Krieg ◽  
Sarvada Chipkar ◽  
Emily Burke ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Environmental factors, such as weather extremes, have the potential to cause adverse effects on plant biomass quality and quantity. Beyond adversely affecting feedstock yield and composition, which have been extensively studied, environmental factors can have detrimental effects on saccharification and fermentation processes in biofuel production. Only a few studies have evaluated the effect of these factors on biomass deconstruction into biofuel and resulting fuel yields. This field-to-fuel evaluation of various feedstocks requires rigorous coordination of pretreatment, enzymatic hydrolysis, and fermentation experiments. A large number of biomass samples, often in limited quantity, are needed to thoroughly understand the effect of environmental conditions on biofuel production. This requires greater processing and analytical throughput of industrially relevant, high solids loading hydrolysates for fermentation, and led to the need for a laboratory-scale high solids experimentation platform. Results A field-to-fuel platform was developed to provide sufficient volumes of high solids loading enzymatic hydrolysate for fermentation. AFEX pretreatment was conducted in custom pretreatment reactors, followed by high solids enzymatic hydrolysis. To accommodate enzymatic hydrolysis of multiple samples, roller bottles were used to overcome the bottlenecks of mixing and reduced sugar yields at high solids loading, while allowing greater sample throughput than possible in bioreactors. The roller bottle method provided 42–47% greater liquefaction compared to the batch shake flask method for the same solids loading. In fermentation experiments, hydrolysates from roller bottles were fermented more rapidly, with greater xylose consumption, but lower final ethanol yields and CO2 production than hydrolysates generated with shake flasks. The entire platform was tested and was able to replicate patterns of fermentation inhibition previously observed for experiments conducted in larger-scale reactors and bioreactors, showing divergent fermentation patterns for drought and normal year switchgrass hydrolysates. Conclusion A pipeline of small-scale AFEX pretreatment and roller bottle enzymatic hydrolysis was able to provide adequate quantities of hydrolysate for respirometer fermentation experiments and was able to overcome hydrolysis bottlenecks at high solids loading by obtaining greater liquefaction compared to batch shake flask hydrolysis. Thus, the roller bottle method can be effectively utilized to compare divergent feedstocks and diverse process conditions.

2018 ◽  
Vol 250 ◽  
pp. 273-280 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bárbara Ribeiro Alves Alencar ◽  
Emmanuel Damilano Dutra ◽  
Everardo Valadares de Sá Barretto Sampaio ◽  
Rômulo Simões Cezar Menezes ◽  
Marcos Antônio Morais

2017 ◽  
Vol 114 (5) ◽  
pp. 980-989 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mingjie Jin ◽  
Cory Sarks ◽  
Bryan D. Bals ◽  
Nick Posawatz ◽  
Christa Gunawan ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Saisi Xue ◽  
Nirmal Uppugundla ◽  
Michael J. Bowman ◽  
David Cavalier ◽  
Leonardo Da Costa Sousa ◽  
...  

RSC Advances ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (20) ◽  
pp. 11558-11566 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xuewen Chi ◽  
Chao Liu ◽  
Yan-Hong Bi ◽  
Guang Yu ◽  
Yuedong Zhang ◽  
...  

The effective KOH pretreatment with the production of lignin-based fertilizer could well match the enzymatic hydrolysis at high solid loading.


2016 ◽  
Vol 111 ◽  
pp. 387-402 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elin Svensson ◽  
Valeria Lundberg ◽  
Mikael Jansson ◽  
Charilaos Xiros ◽  
Thore Berntsson

2017 ◽  
Vol 60 (4) ◽  
pp. 1025-1033
Author(s):  
Alicia A. Modenbach ◽  
Sue E. Nokes ◽  
Michael D. Montross ◽  
Barbara L. Knutson

Abstract. High-solids lignocellulosic pretreatment using NaOH followed by high-solids enzymatic hydrolysis was evaluated for an on-farm biochemical conversion process. Increasing the solids loadings for these processes has the potential for increasing glucose concentrations and downstream ethanol production; however, sequential processing at high-solids loading similar to an on-farm cellulose conversion system has not been studied. This research quantified the effects of high-solids pretreatment with NaOH and subsequent high-solids enzymatic hydrolysis on cellulose conversion. As expected, conversion efficiency was reduced; however, the highest glucose concentration (40.2 g L-1), and therefore the highest potential ethanol concentration, resulted from the high-solids combined pretreatment and hydrolysis. Increasing the enzyme dosage improved cellulose conversion from 9.6% to 36.8% when high-solids loadings were used in both unit operations; however, increasing NaOH loading and pretreatment time did not increase the conversion efficiency. The enzyme-to-substrate ratio had a larger impact on cellulose conversion than the NaOH pretreatment conditions studied, resulting in recommendations for an on-farm bioconversion system. Keywords: Corn stover, Enzymatic hydrolysis, Enzyme loading, High solids, Low solids, Sodium hydroxide.


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