| Literature DB >> 22605970 |
Shuang-Qi Tian1,2, Zhen-Yu Wang1,3, Zi-Luan Fan1, Li-Li Zuo1.
Abstract
To decrease the cost of bioethanol production, biomass recalcitrance needs to be overcome so that the conversion of biomass to bioethanol becomes more efficient. CO(2) laser irradiation can disrupt the lignocellulosic physical structure and reduce the average size of fiber. Analyses with Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, specific surface area, and the microstructure of corn stover were used to elucidate the enhancement mechanism of the pretreatment process by CO(2) laser irradiation. The present work demonstrated that the CO(2) laser had potential to enhance the bioconversion efficiency of lignocellulosic waste to renewable bioethanol. The saccharification rate of the CO(2) laser pretreatment was significantly higher than ultrasonic pretreatment, and reached 27.75% which was 1.34-fold of that of ultrasonic pretreatment. The results showed the impact of CO(2) laser pretreatment on corn stover to be more effective than ultrasonic pretreatment.Entities:
Keywords: CO2 laser; FT-IR; corn stover; pretreatment; ultrasonic
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22605970 PMCID: PMC3344206 DOI: 10.3390/ijms13044141
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Effect of enzymatic hydrolysis with different pretreatments.
Major reducing sugar component contents in different pretreatment hydrolyzates.
| Sample | Xylose (mg/g biomass) | Glucose (mg/g biomass) | Cellobiose (mg/g biomass) |
|---|---|---|---|
| CO2 laser pretreated hydrolysate | 15.03 | 131.20 | 4.67 |
| Ultrasonic pretreated hydrolysate | 20.61 | 101.13 | 7.07 |
| Non-pretreatment hydrolysate | 5.33 | 15.00 | trace amount |
FTIR absorption peak location and assignment of corn stover.
| Wave Number(σ/cm−1) | Intensity of Absorption Band | Absorption Peak Assignment |
|---|---|---|
| 3338 | steep | OH stretching in alcohol and phenol |
| 2921 | moderate | C–H symmetrical and asymmetrical stretching in –CH3 and –CH2– |
| 1650–1630 | semi-steep | Lignin and aromatic ring conjugated C=O stretch |
| 1509–1515 | moderate | Lignin and other aromatic ring skeletal stretch |
| 1462 | infirm | C–H deformations (asym. in –CH3 and –CH2–) in lignin and carbonhydrates |
| 1421 | steep | Aromatic skeletal vibrations combined with C–H in-plane deformations |
| 1325 | moderate | C–H vibration in cellulose and C1–O vibration in syringyl derivatives |
| 1265 | moderate | Aromatic skeletal vibrations, guaiacyl, C=O stretch |
| 1160 | faint | C–O–C vibration in cellulose and hemicellulose |
| 1117–1124 | infirm | C–H aromatic ring, syringyl |
| 1049 | moderate | Si–O stretch in amorphous SiO2 |
| 898 | faint | C–H deformation in cellulose and saccharide |
| 666 | faint | Single-plane vibration of substituted aromatics |
Figure 2FT-IR Spectra of the different pretreatment of corn stover. (A) LAM pretreated corn stover sample compared with non-pretreated; (B) UP pretreated corn stover sample compared with non-pretreated).
Figure 3Scanning electron microscope samples of corn stover surface features: (A) non-pretreatment 200×; (B) LAM pretreatment 200×; (C) UP pretreatment 200×.
Figure 4Laser in a liquid medium incentive mechanism model.
Figure 5Mode chart of CO2 laser pretreatment of corn stover. 1: air pump; 2: magnetic stirrer; 3:bioreactor; 4: laser optical lens; 5: output reflector; 6: input reflector; 7: electrode (+); 8: electrode (−); 9: discharge tube; 10: condensing tube; 11: water outlet; 12: water inlet; 13: air container.