| Literature DB >> 30510474 |
Arijana Bušić1, Nenad Marđetko1, Semjon Kundas2, Galina Morzak3, Halina Belskaya3, Mirela Ivančić Šantek1, Draženka Komes1, Srđan Novak1, Božidar Šantek1.
Abstract
Production of biofuels from renewable feedstocks has captured considerable scientific attention since they could be used to supply energy and alternative fuels. Bioethanol is one of the most interesting biofuels due to its positive impact on the environment. Currently, it is mostly produced from sugar- and starch-containing raw materials. However, various available types of lignocellulosic biomass such as agricultural and forestry residues, and herbaceous energy crops could serve as feedstocks for the production of bioethanol, energy, heat and value-added chemicals. Lignocellulose is a complex mixture of carbohydrates that needs an efficient pretreatment to make accessible pathways to enzymes for the production of fermentable sugars, which after hydrolysis are fermented into ethanol. Despite technical and economic difficulties, renewable lignocellulosic raw materials represent low-cost feedstocks that do not compete with the food and feed chain, thereby stimulating the sustainability. Different bioprocess operational modes were developed for bioethanol production from renewable raw materials. Furthermore, alternative bioethanol separation and purification processes have also been intensively developed. This paper deals with recent trends in the bioethanol production as a fuel from different renewable raw materials as well as with its separation and purification processes.Entities:
Keywords: bioethanol; bioethanol separation and purification; bioprocess operational modes; raw material pretreatment; renewable feedstocks
Year: 2018 PMID: 30510474 PMCID: PMC6233010 DOI: 10.17113/ftb.56.03.18.5546
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Technol Biotechnol ISSN: 1330-9862 Impact factor: 3.918
Fig. 1Biorefinery concepts: a) bottom-up and b) top-down. atraditional products, bnew products ()
Specifications of gasoline and ethanol ()
| Specification | Gasoline | Ethanol |
|---|---|---|
| Chemical formula | CnH2n+2 (n=4–12) | C2H5OH |
| | 100-105 | 46.07 |
| Octane number | 88-100 | 108 |
| ρ/(kg/dm3) | 0.69-0.79 | 0.79 |
| Boiling point/°C | 27-225 | 78 |
| Freezing point/°C | -22.2 | -96.1 |
| Flash point/°C | -43 | 13 |
| Autoignition temperature/°C | 275 | 440 |
| Lower heating value.103/(kJ/dm3) | 30-33 | 21.1 |
| Latent vapourisation heat/(kJ/kg) | 289 | 854 |
| Solubility in water | insoluble | soluble |
Fig. 2Predictions of the world bioethanol production (a) and consumption (b) by 2024 ()
Fig. 3The scheme of bioethanol production from lignocellulose containing raw materials. 1=milling, 2=pretreatment, 3=saccharification, 4=heat exchanger, 5=propagator, 6=bioreactor, 7=stripping column, 8=rectifying column, 9=molecular sieves
Different bioprocess operational modes for bioethanol production from various lignocellulosic raw materials
| Feedstock | Pretreatment/ | Microorganism | Bioprocess mode | | | | Note | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sugar cane bagasse | Diluted acid (H2SO4) | Recombinant | Batch SSF | 51.7 | – | 0.94 | – | ( |
| Bagasse | Acid (H3PO4), | | SHF | 6.24 | 79.09 | 3.04 | PVA | ( |
| | Organosolv | | SSF | ~42 | – | – | substrate loading 15%, | ( |
| Rice straw | Alkali (NaOH), | | Batch SSCF | 28.6 | 86 | – | | ( |
| Corn stover | AFEX | Genetically engineered | SHF | 45.5 | – | 0.87 | 30 °C, | ( |
| Cellulosic material, | - | Recombinant | CBP | 4.24 | 92.2 | 0.55 | 48 °C | ( |
| Corn stover | AFEX | | CBP | 7.0 | – | – | 4% GL, | ( |
E=bioprocess effieciency (E=YP/S/YP/ST.100; YP/S=conversion coefficient of substrate into ethanol (g C2H5OH/g sugar), YP/ST=theoretical conversion coefficient of substrate into ethanol (g C2H5OH/g sugar)), Pmax=maximal ethanol productivity in bioprocess