𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Short-term lime pretreatment of poplar wood

✍ Scribed by Rocio Sierra; Cesar Granda; Mark T. Holtzapple


Publisher
American Institute of Chemical Engineers
Year
2009
Tongue
English
Weight
399 KB
Volume
25
Category
Article
ISSN
8756-7938

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Short‐term lime pretreatment uses lime and high‐pressure oxygen to significantly increase the digestibility of poplar wood. When the treated poplar wood was enzymatically hydrolyzed, glucan and xylan were converted to glucose and xylose, respectively. To calculate product yields from raw biomass, these sugars were expressed as equivalent glucan and xylan. To recommend pretreatment conditions, the single criterion was the maximum overall glucan and xylan yields using a cellulase loading of 15 FPU/g glucan in raw biomass. On this basis, the recommended conditions for short‐term lime pretreatment of poplar wood follow: (1) 2 h, 140°C, 21.7 bar absolute and (2) 2 h, 160°C, and 14.8 bar absolute. In these two cases, the reactivity was nearly identical, thus the selected condition depends on the economic trade off between pressure and temperature. Considering glucose and xylose and their oligomers produced during 72 h of enzymatic hydrolysis, the overall yields attained under these recommended conditions follow: (1) 95.5 g glucan/100 g of glucan in raw biomass and 73.1 g xylan/100 g xylan in raw biomass and (2) 94.2 g glucan/100 g glucan in raw biomass and 73.2 g xylan/100 g xylan in raw biomass. The yields improved by increasing the enzyme loading. An optimal enzyme cocktail was identified as 67% cellulase, 12% β‐glucosidase, and 24% xylanase (mass of protein basis) with cellulase activity of 15 FPU/g glucan in raw biomass and total enzyme loading of 51 mg protein/g glucan in raw biomass. Ball milling the lime‐treated poplar wood allowed for 100% conversion of glucan in 120 h with a cellulase loading of only 10 FPU/g glucan in raw biomass. © 2009 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 2009


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


Selectivity and delignification kinetics
✍ Rocío Sierra-Ramírez; Laura A. Garcia; Mark Thomas Holtzapple 📂 Article 📅 2011 🏛 American Institute of Chemical Engineers 🌐 English ⚖ 924 KB

## Abstract Kinetic models applied to oxygen bleaching of paper pulp focus on the degradation of polymers, either lignin or carbohydrates. Traditionally, they separately model different moieties that degrade at three different rates: rapid, medium, and slow. These models were successfully applied t

Long-term lime pretreatment of poplar wo
✍ Rocio Sierra; Mark T. Holtzapple; Cesar B. Granda 📂 Article 📅 2010 🏛 American Institute of Chemical Engineers 🌐 English ⚖ 799 KB

## Abstract Long‐term lime pretreatment has proven to increase digestibility of many herbaceous lignocellulose sources; but until this work, its effects had not been evaluated on wood, whose lignin content is higher, and therefore, more recalcitrant to enzymatic hydrolysis. In this study, the mild

Lack of short-term effects on the donor
✍ Professor Peter Jacobs; Lucille Wood 📂 Article 📅 1987 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 258 KB

In SO individuals. intensive harvesting of relatively pure mononuclear cell fractions from the peripheral circulation was carried out in 195 procedures. Serial collections from bone marrow donors (group 1: n = 35) or isolated procedures from volunteers (group 2: n = 15) were without morbidity. A med