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Acid-catalyzed steam pretreatment of lodgepole pine and subsequent enzymatic hydrolysis and fermentation to ethanol

✍ Scribed by Shannon M. Ewanick; Renata Bura; John N. Saddler


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
208 KB
Volume
98
Category
Article
ISSN
0006-3592

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Utilization of ethanol produced from biomass has the potential to offset the use of gasoline and reduce CO~2~ emissions. This could reduce the effects of global warming, one of which is the current outbreak of epidemic proportions of the mountain pine beetle (MPB) in British Columbia (BC), Canada. The result of this is increasing volumes of dead lodgepole pine with increasingly limited commercial uses. Bioconversion of lodgepole pine to ethanol using SO~2~‐catalyzed steam explosion was investigated. The optimum pretreatment condition for this feedstock was determined to be 200°C, 5 min, and 4% SO~2~ (w/w). Simultaneous saccharification and fermentation (SSF) of this material provided an overall ethanol yield of 77% of the theoretical yield from raw material based on starting glucan, mannan, and galactan, which corresponds to 244 g ethanol/kg raw material within 30 h. Three conditions representing low (L), medium (M), and high (H) severity were also applied to healthy lodgepole pine. Although the M severity conditions of 200°C, 5 min, and 4% SO~2~ were sufficiently robust to pretreat healthy wood, the substrate produced from beetle‐killed (BK) wood provided consistently higher ethanol yields after SSF than the other substrates tested. BK lodgepole pine appears to be an excellent candidate for efficient and productive bioconversion to ethanol. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2007;98: 737–746. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.