Assessment of corn stover pretreated with shock and alkali using methane‐arrested anaerobic digestion

Corn stover, an underutilized agricultural residue, is a promising lignocellulosic feedstock for producing biofuels. To fully utilize it, pretreatment is needed. Typically, pretreatments are rapidly assessed using extracellular enzymes that release sugars from cellulose and hemicellulose. In contras...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biotechnology progress 2022-07, Vol.38 (4), p.e3257-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Olokede, Opeyemi, Hsu, Shen‐chun, Ju, Huang, Helms, Elise, Broyles, Aidan, Holtzapple, Mark
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Corn stover, an underutilized agricultural residue, is a promising lignocellulosic feedstock for producing biofuels. To fully utilize it, pretreatment is needed. Typically, pretreatments are rapidly assessed using extracellular enzymes that release sugars from cellulose and hemicellulose. In contrast, this study uses methane‐arrested anaerobic digestion (MAAD) to assess pretreatments. Although time consuming, MAAD is a more accurate assessment technique when lignocellulose is employed in the carboxylate platform, a promising approach that utilizes nearly all biomass components. Using recommended pretreatment conditions identified from a previous study, three corn stover pretreatments were compared using MAAD: (1) shock‐only, (2) NaOH‐only, and (3) shock + NaOH. Air‐dried sewage sludge was used as nutrient source. At 100 g/L initial substrate concentration, compared to untreated corn stover, shock‐only decreased conversion (amount of biomass digested) by 14%, NaOH‐only increased conversion by 82%, and shock + NaOH increased conversion by 104%. Using batch MAAD data, the continuum particle distribution model simulated four‐stage countercurrent fermentation. At an industrial non‐acid volatile solids (NAVS) concentration of 300 g/Lliq, for both NaOH‐only and shock + NaOH, the model predicts total carboxylic acid concentration of about 58 g/L and conversion of about 0.85 g NAVSdigested/g NAVSfed at liquid retention time of 35 days and volatile solid loading rate of 4 g/(Lliq⋅day). At this long solid residence time, shock is not necessary; however, with short solid residence times, shock acts synergistically to aid NaOH pretreatment. Shock treatment offers a way to reduce pretreatment costs without sacrificing pretreatment efficacy.
ISSN:8756-7938
1520-6033
DOI:10.1002/btpr.3257