Ethanol production from residual lignocellulosic fibers generated through the steam treatment of whole sorghum biomass.

Bioresour Technol

Biomass Technology Laboratory (BTL), Department of Chemical Engineering and Biotechnological Engineering, University of Sherbrooke, QC, Canada. Electronic address:

Published: November 2019

Cellulosic ethanol could play a major role in the upcoming circular-economy once the process complexity, low carbohydrate extraction yields and high costs are resolved. To this purpose, different steam-treatment severity factors were employed on whole sweet sorghum biomass, followed by the delignification and hydrolysis of resulted lignocellulose fibers. A modified ASTM International (American Society for Testing and Material) standard cellulose hydrolysis approach as well as a newly developed SACH (Sulfuric Acid Cellulose Hydrolysis) process were used, recovering up to 24.3 wt% of cellulosic carbohydrates. This amounted to a total extractable and constitutive carbohydrate recovery of 51.7 wt% (dry basis) when a mild steam-treatment of whole sorghum biomass and the SACH cellulose hydrolysis were employed. An ethanol potential of 6378 L/ha/year was determined, comparable to values obtained from biomass such as sugarcane in warmer climates, supporting thus the opportunity of implementing this novel approach on a wider scale.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2019.121975DOI Listing

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