Literature DB >> 23893564

Severity factor coefficients for subcritical liquid hot water pretreatment of hardwood chips.

Youngmi Kim1, Thomas Kreke, Nathan S Mosier, Michael R Ladisch.   

Abstract

Single stage and multi-stage liquid hot water pretreatments of mixed hardwood pinchips were investigated at various severities (log R0  = 3.65-4.81) to assess the efficiencies of the pretreatments with respect to achieving high pentose sugar yields and improved enzymatic digestibility of pretreated cellulose. We investigate the effect of pretreatment parameters that is, temperature, and time, as expressed in the severity factor, on the recovery of sugars and hydrolyzability of pretreated cellulose. We find the severity factor, in its widely used form, is an incomplete measure for evaluating the pretreatment efficiencies and predicting overall sugar yields when pretreatment temperatures above 200°C are used. Corrections to the severity factor and its correlation to the measured pretreatment responses (% xylan solubilization, xylan recovery as fermentable sugars, cellulose enzymatic digestibility) indicate a greater influence of temperature on the pretreatment efficiencies than predicted by the commonly used severity factor. A low temperature, long residence time is preferred for hemicellulose dissolution during the pretreatment since the condition favors oligosaccharide and monomeric sugar formation over sugar degradation. On the contrary, high cellulose hydrolyzability is achieved with a high temperature (>200°C), high severity pretreatment when pretreatment is followed by enzyme hydrolysis. In multi-stage pretreatment, the first low-severity pretreatment is optimized for solubilizing fast-hydrolyzing hemicellulose while minimizing formation of furans. The subsequent pretreatment is carried out at over 200°C to recover the difficult-to-hydrolyze hemicellulose fraction as well as to increase susceptibility of pretreated cellulose to enzymes. High recovery (>92%) of hemicellulose-derived pentose sugars and enhanced enzymatic hydrolysis of pretreated cellulose (where >80% glucose yield results with 20 FPU = 32 mg protein/g glucan or 10-13 mg/g initial hardwood) are achieved by applying a multi-stage pretreatment. This work shows how the severity equation may be used to obtain a single characteristic curve that correlate xylan solubilization and enzymatic cellulose hydrolysis as a function of severity at pretreatment temperatures up to 230°C.
© 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  cellulose; hardwood; hydrolysis; liquid hot water pretreatment; severity factor

Mesh:

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23893564     DOI: 10.1002/bit.25009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biotechnol Bioeng        ISSN: 0006-3592            Impact factor:   4.530


  9 in total

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4.  Comprehensive evaluation of the liquid fraction during the hydrothermal treatment of rapeseed straw.

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5.  Effect of Lignin Content on Cellulolytic Saccharification of Liquid Hot Water Pretreated Sugarcane Bagasse.

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7.  A laboratory-scale pretreatment and hydrolysis assay for determination of reactivity in cellulosic biomass feedstocks.

Authors:  Edward J Wolfrum; Ryan M Ness; Nicholas J Nagle; Darren J Peterson; Christopher J Scarlata
Journal:  Biotechnol Biofuels       Date:  2013-11-14       Impact factor: 6.040

8.  The effect of liquid hot water pretreatment on the chemical-structural alteration and the reduced recalcitrance in poplar.

Authors:  Mi Li; Shilin Cao; Xianzhi Meng; Michael Studer; Charles E Wyman; Arthur J Ragauskas; Yunqiao Pu
Journal:  Biotechnol Biofuels       Date:  2017-11-30       Impact factor: 6.040

9.  Effects on Lignin Redistribution in Eucalyptus globulus Fibres Pre-Treated by Steam Explosion: A Microscale Study to Cellulose Accessibility.

Authors:  Eduardo Troncoso-Ortega; Rosario Del P Castillo; Pablo Reyes-Contreras; Patricia Castaño-Rivera; Regis Teixeira Mendonça; Nicolás Schiappacasse; Carolina Parra
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  9 in total

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