| Literature DB >> 21687609 |
Gary Brodeur1, Elizabeth Yau, Kimberly Badal, John Collier, K B Ramachandran, Subramanian Ramakrishnan.
Abstract
Overcoming the recalcitrance (resistance of plant cell walls to deconstruction) of lignocellulosic biomass is a key step in the production of fuels and chemicals. The recalcitrance is due to the highly crystalline structure of cellulose which is embedded in a matrix of polymers-lignin and hemicellulose. The main goal of pretreatment is to overcome this recalcitrance, to separate the cellulose from the matrix polymers, and to make it more accessible for enzymatic hydrolysis. Reports have shown that pretreatment can improve sugar yields to higher than 90% theoretical yield for biomass such as wood, grasses, and corn. This paper reviews different leading pretreatment technologies along with their latest developments and highlights their advantages and disadvantages with respect to subsequent hydrolysis and fermentation. The effects of different technologies on the components of biomass (cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin) are also reviewed with a focus on how the treatment greatly enhances enzymatic cellulose digestibility.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21687609 PMCID: PMC3112529 DOI: 10.4061/2011/787532
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Enzyme Res ISSN: 2090-0414
Figure 1Schematic representation (adapted from [1, 12]) of the matrix of polymers in which cellulose exists. Pretreatment of biomass by different methods removes hemicellulose and lignin from this matrix before hydrolysis.
Advantages and disadvantages of different pretreatment methods of lignocellulosic biomass.
| Pretreatment method | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Alkali | (i) Efficient removal of lignin | (i) High cost of alkaline catalyst |
| (ii) Low inhibitor formation | (ii) Alteration of lignin structure | |
| Acid | (i) High glucose yield | (i) High costs of acids and need for recovery |
| (ii) Solubilizes hemicellulose | (ii) High costs of corrosive resistant equipment | |
| (iii) Formation of inhibitors | ||
| Green solvents | (i) Lignin and hemicellulose hydrolysis | (i) High solvent costs |
| (ii) Ability to dissolve high loadings of different biomass types | (ii) Need for solvent recovery and recycle | |
| (iii) Mild processing conditions (low temperatures) | ||
| Steam | (i) Cost effective | (i) Partial hemicellulose degradation |
| (ii) Lignin transformation and hemicellulose solubilization | (ii) Acid catalyst needed to make process efficient with high lignin content material | |
| (iii) High yield of glucose and hemicellulose in two-step process | (iii) Toxic compound generation | |
| LHW | (i) Separation of nearly pure hemicellulose from rest of feedstock | (i) High energy/water input |
| (ii) No need for catalyst | (ii) Solid mass left over will need to be dealt with (cellulose/lignin) | |
| (iii) Hydrolysis of hemicellulose | ||
| AFEX | (i) High effectiveness for herbaceous material and low lignin content biomass | (i) Recycling of ammonia is needed |
| (ii) Cellulose becomes more accessible | (ii) Less effective process with increasing lignin content | |
| (iii) Causes inactivity between lignin and enzymes | (iii) Alters lignin structure | |
| (iv) Low formation of inhibitors | (iv) High cost of ammonia | |
| ARP | (i) Removes majority of lignin | (i) High energy costs and liquid loading |
| (ii) High cellulose content after pretreatment | ||
| (iii) Herbaceous materials are most affected | ||
| Supercritical fluid | (i) Low degradation of sugars | (i) High pressure requirements |
| (ii) Cost effective | (ii) Lignin and hemicelluloses unaffected | |
| (iii) Increases cellulose accessible area | ||
Solubility of cellulose dissolved in different ILs (adapted from [77]). For the cellulose column, the numbers in brackets correspond to the DP values, if known. MCC: microcrystalline cellulose with DP ca. 270–300. Key for abbreviations of IL cations: [Cmim]+: 1-alkyl-3-methylimidazolium (n = number of carbons in the alkyl chain); [Cmmim]+: 1-alkyl-2,3-dimethylimidazolium (n = number of carbons in the alkyl chain); [Amim]+: 1-allyl-3-methylimidazolium; [Ammim]+: 1-allyl-2,3-dimethylimidazolium; [C4mP]+: 1-butyl-3-methylpyridinium; [Bu4P]+: tetrabutylphosphonium.
| IL | Cellulose | Method | Solubility % |
|---|---|---|---|
| [C2mim]Cl | Avicel | Heat, 100°C | 10 |
| [C3mim]Cl | Avicel | Heat, 100°C | 0.5 |
| [C4mim]Cl | Avicel | Heat, 100°C | 20 |
| [C4mim]Cl | Pulp (1000) | Heat | 10 |
| [C4mim]Cl | Pulp (1000) | Microwave | 25 |
| [C5mim]Cl | Avicel | Heat, 100°C | 1.5 |
| [C6mim]Cl | Pulp (1000) | Microwave | 5 |
| [C6mim]Cl | Avicel | Heat, 100°C | 6.5 |
| [C7mim]Cl | Avicel | Heat, 100°C | 5 |
| [C8mim]Cl | Avicel | Heat, 100°C | 4 |
| [Amim]Cl | Pulp (650) | Heat, 80°C | 14.5 |
| [Amim]Cl | MCC | Ultrasound | 27 |
| [C4mmim]Cl | Pulp (569) | Heat, 90–130°C | 12.8 |
| [C4mmim]Cl | Pulp (286) | Heat, 90°C | 9 |
| [C4mmim]Cl | Pulp (593) | Heat, 90°C | 6 |
| [C4mmim]Cl | Pulp (1198) | Heat, 90°C | 4 |
| [C4mPy]Cl | Pulp (593) | Heat, 105°C | 37 |
| [C4mim]Br | Pulp (1000) | Microwave | 5–7 |
| [Ammim]Br | Pulp (286) | Heat, 80°C | 12 |
| [Ammim]Br | Pulp (1198) | Heat, 80°C | 4 |
| [C4mim][SCN] | Pulp (1000) | Microwave | 5–7 |
| [C2mim][OAc] | Avicel | Heat, 100°C | 8 |
| [C2mim][OAc] | Avicel (225) | Heat, 110°C | 28 |
| [C4mim][OAc] | MCC | Heat, 70°C | 28.5 |
| [C4mim][OAc] | Avicel | Heat, 100°C | 12 |
| [Amim][HCOO] | MCC | Heat, 85°C | 22 |
| [C4mim][HCOO] | MCC | Heat, 70°C | 12.5 |
| [C4mim][HCOO] | Avicel (225) | Heat, 110°C | 8 |
| [C4mim][(C6H5)COO] | MCC | Heat, 70°C | 12 |
| [C4mim][(NH2)CH2COO] | MCC | Heat, 70°C | 12 |
| [C4mim][OHCH2COO] | MCC | Heat, 70°C | 12 |
| [Bu4P][HCOO] | Avicel (225) | Heat, 110°C | 6 |
| [C4mim][HSCH2COO] | MCC | Heat, 70°C | 13.5 |
| [C2mim][(CH3CH2O)2PO2] | Avicel | Heat, 100°C | 12–14 |
| [C1mim][(CH3O)2PO2] | Avicel | Heat, 100°C | 10 |
| [C2mim][(CH3O)(H)PO2] | MCC | Heat, 45°C | 10 |
Figure 2(a) [89]: Yield of reducing sugars as a function of time for four different samples—cellulose (dissolving pulp of degree of polymerization 1160) dissolved in NMMO (blue circle), regenerated cellulose suspended in DI water (red square), and untreated cellulose suspended in DI water (green triangle). The initial cellulose concentration is 7.22 mg/mL, pH is 5.7 and enzyme loading is 122 FPU/g. The lines are drawn to guide the eye. The cellulase used is Accellerase 1000 obtained from Genencor. (b) Yield of sugars as a function of time for in situ hydrolysis of cellulose (the same substrate as in Figure 2(a)) in NMMO and two ionic liquids—[Emim]Ac and [Emim]DEP. The initial cellulose concentration is 7.22 mg/mL, pH is 5.7, and enzyme loading is 122 FPU/g. The lines are drawn to guide the eye.
Effect of various pretreatment methods on the chemical composition and chemical/physical structure of lignocellulosic biomass (adapted from [12]). H: high effect, L: low effect, ND: not determined, *Depends on the chemical nature of the solvent.
| Pretreatment | Increases accessible surface area | Decrystallizes cellulose | Removes hemicellulose | Removes lignin | Alters lignin structure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Steam explosion | H | H | L | ||
| Liquid hot water | H | ND | H | L | |
| Dilute acid | H | H | H | ||
| AFEX | H | H | L | H | H |
| ARP | H | H | L | H | H |
| Lime | H | ND | L | H | H |
| Green solvents (NMMO and ionic liquids) | H | H | L | H or L | L |
| Supercritical fluid | H | H | H | L |
Capital costs of different pretreatment technologies (adapted from [138]).
| Pretreatment method | Pretreatment direct fixed capital, $MM | Pretreatment breakdown, % Reactor/% other | Total fixed capital, $MM | Ethanol production, MM gal/yr | Total fixed capital, $/gal annual capacity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dilute acid | 25.0 | 64/36 | 208.6 | 56.1 | 3.72 |
| Hot water | 4.5 | 100/0 | 200.9 | 44.0 | 4.57 |
| AFEX | 25.7 | 26/74 | 211.5 | 56.8 | 3.72 |
| ARP | 28.3 | 25/75 | 210.9 | 46.3 | 4.56 |
| Lime | 22.3 | 19/81 | 163.6 | 48.9 | 3.35 |
| No pretreatment | 0 | — | 200.3 | 9.0 | 22.26 |
| Ideal pretreatment | 0 | — | 162.5 | 64.7 | 2.51 |