Abstract

BackgroundMedium chain carboxylic acids, such as caproic acid, are conventionally produced from food materials. Caproic acid can be produced through fermentation by the reverse β-oxidation of lactic acid, generated from low value lignocellulosic biomass. In situ extraction of caproic acid can be achieved by membrane electrolysis coupled to the fermentation process, allowing recovery by phase separation.ResultsGrass was fermented to lactic acid in a leach-bed-type reactor, which was then further converted to caproic acid in a secondary fermenter. The lactic acid concentration was 9.36 ± 0.95 g L−1 over a 33-day semi-continuous operation, and converted to caproic acid at pH 5.5–6.2, with a concentration of 4.09 ± 0.54 g L−1 during stable production. The caproic acid product stream was extracted in its anionic form, concentrated and converted to caproic acid by membrane electrolysis, resulting in a >70 wt% purity solution. In a parallel test exploring the upper limits of production rate through cell retention, we achieved the highest reported caproic acid production rate to date from a lignocellulosic biomass (grass, via a coupled process), at 0.99 ± 0.02 g L−1 h−1. The fermenting microbiome (mainly consisting of Clostridium IV and Lactobacillus) was capable of producing a maximum caproic acid concentration of 10.92 ± 0.62 g L−1 at pH 5.5, at the border of maximum solubility of protonated caproic acid.ConclusionsGrass can be utilized as a substrate to produce caproic acid. The biological intermediary steps were enhanced by separating the steps to focus on the lactic acid intermediary. Notably, the pipeline was almost completely powered through electrical inputs, and thus could potentially be driven from sustainable energy without need for chemical input.Graphical abstractMicrobial and electrochemical production of lactic acid, caproic acid and decane from grass.

Highlights

  • Medium chain carboxylic acids, such as caproic acid, are conventionally produced from food materials

  • The lactic acid concentration rapidly reached its final concentration within the first day of fermentation, indicating that the native microorganisms of grass were active as there was no lag time for lactic acid production

  • The conversion of organic compounds to lactic acid was low relative to our previous study [5] (0.065 g g−1 in this study compared to 0.136 g g−1 grass volatile solid), while the rate of lactic acid production was 0.197 g L−1 h−1 in this study

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Summary

Introduction

Medium chain carboxylic acids, such as caproic acid, are conventionally produced from food materials. The medium-chain carboxylic acid market (caproic acid, caprylic acid, capric acid, and lauric acid) is predicted to reach USD 1.25 billion globally by 2020 [1]. These medium chain fatty acids (MCFA) are derived from triglycerides of coconut and palm oil by fractional distillation, ozonolysis or catalytic reduction processes [2]. Lactic acid and acetic acid are highly soluble in water, which makes the downstream extraction of lactic acid energy intensive. More hydrophobic products such as caproic acid can

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