Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe current higher manufacturing cost of biofuels production from lignocellulosics hinders the commercial process development. Although many approaches for reducing the manufacturing cost of cellulosic biofuels may be considered, the use of less expensive feedstocks may represent the largest impact. In the present study, we investigated the use of a low cost feedstock: post-biogas digestion dairy manure fiber. We used an innovative pretreatment procedure that combines dilute sodium hydroxide with supplementary aqueous ammonia, with the goal of releasing fermentable sugar for ethanol fermentation.ResultsPost-biogas digestion manure fiber were found to contain 41.1% total carbohydrates, 29.4% lignin, 13.7% ash, and 11.7% extractives on dry basis. Chemical treatment were applied using varying amounts of NaOH and NH3(2-10% loadings of each alkali on dry solids) at mild conditions of 100°C for 5 min, which led to a reduction in lignin of 16-40%. Increasing treatment severity conditions to 121°C for 60 min improved delignification to 17-67%, but also solubilized significant amounts of the carbohydrates. A modified severity parameter model was used to determine the delignification efficiency of manure fiber during alkaline pretreatment. The linear model well predicted the experimental values of fiber delignification for all pretreatment methods (R2> 0.94). Enzymatic digestion of the treated fibers attained 15-50% saccharification for the low severity treatment, whereas the high severity treatment achieved up to 2-fold higher saccharification. Pretreatment with NaOH alone at a variety of concentrations and temperatures provide low delignification levels of only 5 − 21% and low saccharification yields of 3 − 8%, whereas pretreatment with the combination of NaOH and NH3improved delignification levels and saccharification yields 2–3.5 higher than pretreatment with NH3alone. Additionally, the combined NaOH and NH3pretreatment led to noticeable changes in fiber morphology as determined by SEM and CrI measurements.ConclusionsWe show that combined alkaline treatment by NaOH and NH3improves the delignification and enzymatic digestibility of anaerobically digested manure fibers. Although pretreatment leads to acceptable saccharification for this low-cost feedstock, the high chemical consumption costs of the process likely will require recovery and reuse of the treatment chemicals, prior to this process being economically feasibility.

Highlights

  • The current higher manufacturing cost of biofuels production from lignocellulosics hinders the commercial process development

  • As pretreatment protocols for post-biogas digestion (PBD) manure fiber, which contain high residual lignin, aimed at improving enzymatic digestion for ethanol fermentation, we explored the use of dilute sodium hydroxide and/or aqueous ammonia

  • Alkaline pretreatment of PBD manure fiber We investigated the pretreatment of PBD manure fiber by dilute sodium hydroxide and ammonium hydroxide (SHAH)

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Summary

Introduction

The current higher manufacturing cost of biofuels production from lignocellulosics hinders the commercial process development. We investigated the use of a low cost feedstock: post-biogas digestion dairy manure fiber. The most commonly investigated lignocellulosic feedstocks for potential ethanol production are agricultural (crop residues) and forestry wastes (mill residues) Both of these feedstocks are natural composites consisting of three main biopolymers; cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin [10,11,12,13,14,15]. Several studies [16,17,18,19,20] have demonstrated the potential of manure fibers (either pre- or post-biogas digestion) as a lignocellulose feedstock for the production of biofuels and value-added chemicals. Anaerobic digestion of manure for the production of biogas consumes hemicellulose and most-available soluble sugars and leave cellulose and lignin untouched [20,32]. A pretreatment step mechanical and/or chemical is necessary to modify the lignocellulose complex matrix structure in such a way as to disrupt lignin, dissolve hemicelluloses, and break down the cellulose crystallinity in order to enhance substrate accessibility to enzymes and in turn, release more fermentable sugars [38,39]

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