Abstract

BackgroundThe pyrolytic aqueous condensate (PAC) formed during the fast pyrolysis of wheat straw contains a variety of organic carbons and might therefore potentially serve as an inexpensive substrate for microbial growth. One of its main components is acetic acid, which was recently shown to be a suitable carbon source for the filamentous fungus Aspergillus oryzae. However, the condensate also contains numerous toxic compounds that inhibit fungal growth and result in a tolerance of only about 1%. Therefore, to enable the use of the PAC as sole substrate for A. oryzae cultivations, a pretreatment seems to be necessary.ResultsVarious conditions for treatments with activated carbon, overliming, rotary evaporation and laccase were evaluated regarding fungal growth and the content of inhibitory model substances. Whereas the first three methods considerably increased the fungal tolerance to up to 1.625%, 12.5% and 30%, respectively, the enzymatic treatment did not result in any improvement. The optimum carbon load for the treatment with activated carbon was identified to be 10% (w/v) and overliming should ideally be performed at 100 °C and an initial pH of 12. The best detoxification results were achieved with rotary evaporation at 200 mbar as a complete removal of guaiacol and a strong reduction in the concentration of acetol, furfural, 2-cyclopenten-1-one and phenol by 84.9%, 95.4%, 97.7% and 86.2%, respectively, were observed. Subsequently, all possible combinations of the effective single methods were performed and rotary evaporation followed by overliming and activated carbon treatment proved to be most efficient as it enabled growth in 100% PAC shake-flask cultures and resulted in a maximum cell dry weight of 5.21 ± 0.46 g/L.ConclusionThis study provides a comprehensive insight into the detoxification efficiency of a variety of treatment methods at multiple conditions. It was revealed that with a suitable combination of these methods, PAC toxicity can be reduced to such an extent that growth on pure condensate is possible. This can be considered as a first important step towards a microbial valorization of the pyrolytic side-stream with A. oryzae.

Highlights

  • The pyrolytic aqueous condensate (PAC) formed during the fast pyrolysis of wheat straw contains a variety of organic carbons and might potentially serve as an inexpensive substrate for microbial growth

  • The results revealed that A. oryzae was capable of growth only in the PAC treated with rotary evaporation (RE) + OL + activated carbon treatments (AC), so this combination was considered as optimal detoxification procedure

  • With an enzymatic treatment using T. versicolor laccase the content of phenolics could partly be reduced; the reduction did not result in any improvement in the fungal tolerance

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Summary

Introduction

The pyrolytic aqueous condensate (PAC) formed during the fast pyrolysis of wheat straw contains a variety of organic carbons and might potentially serve as an inexpensive substrate for microbial growth. Fast pyrolysis is a thermochemical biomass conversion procedure and represents the first step of the b­ ioliq® process that was developed at the KIT (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany). The organic fraction is characterized by a high heating value of > 20 MJ/ kg [9] enabling its gasification to produce syngas and after further processing synthetic fuels and chemicals. It contains only 50–70% of the initial bioenergy of the feedstock and is mixed with up to 20% of the pyrolysis char to obtain a dense bio-slurry that makes about 90% of the bioenergy accessible for syngas production [3]. The heating value of the PAC is rather low (5.4 MJ/kg) mainly due to its high water content of about 80–85% [2] making an energetic utilization rather unlikely

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