Publications by authors named "Larissa Canilha"

Depleted supplies of fossil fuel, regular price hikes of gasoline, and environmental damage have necessitated the search for economic and eco-benign alternative of gasoline. Ethanol is produced from food/feed-based substrates (grains, sugars, and molasses), and its application as an energy source does not seem fit for long term due to the increasing fuel, food, feed, and other needs. These concerns have enforced to explore the alternative means of cost competitive and sustainable supply of biofuel.

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Experiments based on a 2(3) central composite full factorial design were carried out in 200-ml stainless-steel containers to study the pretreatment, with dilute sulfuric acid, of a sugarcane bagasse sample obtained from a local sugar-alcohol mill. The independent variables selected for study were temperature, varied from 112.5°C to 157.

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The objective of this study was to evaluate the ethanol production from the sugars contained in the sugarcane bagasse hemicellulosic hydrolysate with the yeast Pichia stipitis DSM 3651. The fermentations were carried out in 250-mL Erlenmeyers with 100 mL of medium incubated at 200 rpm and 30 degrees C for 120 h. The medium was composed by raw (non-detoxified) hydrolysate or by hydrolysates detoxified by pH alteration followed by active charcoal adsorption or by adsorption into ion-exchange resins, all of them supplemented with yeast extract (3 g/L), malt extract (3 g/L), and peptone (5 g/L).

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Article Synopsis
  • Wheat straw hemicellulosic hydrolysate was utilized as a source for producing xylitol, a sugar alcohol.
  • Using a medium that contains xylose to grow the inoculum did not enhance xylitol production from the hydrolysate.
  • The hydrolysate underwent detoxification treatment with 2.5% activated charcoal to effectively remove harmful inhibitory substances.
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Candida guilliermondii FTI 20037 cells were entrapped in Ca-alginate beads and used for xylose-to-xylitol bioconversions during five successive batches in a stirred tank reactor. Supplemented sugarcane bagasse hemicellulosic hydrolysate was used as the fermentation medium. The average volume of the Ca-alginate beads was reduced by about 30% after the 600 h taken to perform the five bioconversion cycles, thus demonstrating physical instability under the conditions prevailing in the reactor vessel.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study focused on producing xylitol through batch fermentation using a specific yeast called Candida guilliermondii and wheat straw hemicellulose hydrolysate in a stirred tank reactor.
  • After 54 hours, the process successfully converted 30.5 g of xylose per liter into 27.5 g of xylitol per liter.
  • This resulted in a high conversion yield of 0.9 grams of xylitol for every gram of xylose and a productivity rate of 0.5 grams of xylitol per liter per hour.
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