| Literature DB >> 27359065 |
Daniel Pleissner1, Anna-Katrin Neu2, Kerstin Mehlmann2, Roland Schneider2, Gloria Inés Puerta-Quintero3, Joachim Venus4.
Abstract
In this study, the lignocellulosic residue coffee pulp was used as carbon source in fermentative l(+)-lactic acid production using Bacillus coagulans. After thermo-chemical treatment at 121°C for 30min in presence of 0.18molL(-1) H2SO4 and following an enzymatic digestion using Accellerase 1500 carbon-rich hydrolysates were obtained. Two different coffee pulp materials with comparable biomass composition were used, but sugar concentrations in hydrolysates showed variations. The primary sugars were (gL(-1)) glucose (20-30), xylose (15-25), sucrose (5-11) and arabinose (0.7-10). Fermentations were carried out at laboratory (2L) and pilot (50L) scales in presence of 10gL(-1) yeast extract. At pilot scale carbon utilization and lactic acid yield per gram of sugar consumed were 94.65% and 0.78gg(-1), respectively. The productivity was 4.02gL(-1)h(-1). Downstream processing resulted in a pure formulation containing 937gL(-1)l(+)-lactic acid with an optical purity of 99.7%.Entities:
Keywords: Agricultural residue utilization; Bacillus coagulans; Coffee pulp; Renewable resources
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27359065 DOI: 10.1016/j.biortech.2016.06.078
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioresour Technol ISSN: 0960-8524 Impact factor: 9.642