Abstract
BackgroundForest residue is one of the most cost-effective feedstock for biofuel production. It has relatively high bulk density and can be harvested year round, advantageous for reducing transportation cost and eliminating onsite storage. However, forest residues, especially those from softwood species, are highly recalcitrant to biochemical conversion. A severe pretreatment for removing this recalcitrance can result in increased sugar degradation to inhibitors and hence cause difficulties in fermentation at high solid loadings. Here, we presented high titer ethanol production from Douglas-fir forest residue without detoxification. The strong recalcitrance of the Douglas-fir residue was removed by sulfite pretreatment to overcome the recalcitrance of lignocelluloses (SPORL). Sugar degradation to inhibitors was substantially reduced using a novel approach of “pH profiling” by delaying acid application in pretreatment, which facilitated the simultaneous enzymatic saccharification and fermentation of undetoxified whole slurry at a solid loading of 21%.Results“pH profiling” reduced furan production by approximately 70% in using SPORL pretreating Douglas-fir forest residue (FS-10) comparing with the control run while without sacrificing enzymatic saccharification of the resultant substrate. pH profiling also reduced carbohydrate degradation. The improved carbohydrate yield in pretreated solids and reduced fermentation inhibitors with pH profiling resulted in a terminal ethanol titer of 48.9 ± 1.4 g/L and yield of 297 ± 9 L/tonne FS-10, which are substantially higher, i.e., by 27% in titer and by 38% in yield, than those of a control SPORL run without pH profiling.ConclusionsEconomical and large-volume production of commodity biofuels requires the utilization of feedstocks with low value (therefore low cost) and sustainably producible in large quantities, such as forest residues. However, most existing pretreatment technologies cannot remove the strong recalcitrance of forest residues to produce practically fermentable high titer sugars. Here, we demonstrated a commercially scalable and efficient technology capable of removing the strong recalcitrant nature of forest residues using “pH profiling” together with “low temperature SPORL”. The resultant pretreated whole slurry of a Douglas-fir forest residue using this technology can be easily processed at high solids of 21% without detoxification to achieve a high ethanol yield of 297 L/tonne at 48.9 g/L.Graphical Graphic table of content.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13068-015-0205-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Highlights
Forest residue is one of the most cost-effective feedstock for biofuel production
Upgrade of Douglas-fir forest residue by physical fractionation The results from the present study indicated that fractionation was effective to reduce bark content of the Douglas-fir residue harvested using grinding
The resultant Douglas-fir forest residue labeled as FS-10 had a bark content of 4.7% compared with 5.9% in the as-harvested residue to result in a lower lignin and higher carbohydrate contents of 29.3% and 56.4%, respectively, than the 30.5% and 50.3% of the as-harvested residue (Table 1)
Summary
Forest residue is one of the most cost-effective feedstock for biofuel production. It has relatively high bulk density and can be harvested year round, advantageous for reducing transportation cost and eliminating onsite storage. Most promising and commonly practiced acidic pretreatments, such as dilute acid [1,2], sulfite pretreatment to overcome recalcitrance of lignocellulose (SPORL) [2,3], organosolv [4], and SO2-catalyzed steam explosion [5,6], can degrade sugars to undesirable compounds such as furans. These pretreatments convert acetyl groups on the hemicellulose backbone into acetic acid. Removal of the inhibitive compounds through detoxification steps is possible, but at additional costs, which negatively affects production economics
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