Abstract

Two corn preparation methods, rollermill flaking and hammermill grinding, were compared for efficient processing of corn into ethanol by granular starch hydrolysis and simultaneous fermentation by yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Corn was either ground in a hammermill with different size screens or crushed in a smooth-surfaced rollermill at different roller gap settings. The partitioning of beer solids and size distribution of solids in the thin stillage were compared. The mean particle diameter d 50 for preparations varied with set-ups and ranged between 210 and 340 μm for ground corn, and 1180–1267 μm for flaked corn. The ethanol concentrations in beer were similar (18–19% v/v) for ground and flaked preparations, however, ethanol productivity increased with reduced particle size. Roller versus hammermilling of corn reduced solids in thin stillage by 28%, and doubled the volume percent of fines ( d 50 ∼ 7 μm)in thin stillage and decreased coarse ( d 50 ∼ 122 μm) by half compared to hammermilling.

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