Abstract

BackgroundButyric acid is an important chemical currently produced from petrochemical feedstocks. Its production from renewable, low-cost biomass in fermentation has attracted large attention in recent years. In this study, the feasibility of corn husk, an abundant agricultural residue, for butyric acid production by using Clostridium tyrobutyricum immobilized in a fibrous bed bioreactor (FBB) was evaluated.ResultsHydrolysis of corn husk (10% solid loading) with 0.4 M H2SO4 at 110 °C for 6 h resulted in a hydrolysate containing ~ 50 g/L total reducing sugars (glucose:xylose = 1.3:1.0). The hydrolysate was used for butyric acid fermentation by C. tyrobutyricum in a FBB, which gave 42.6 and 53.0% higher butyric acid production from glucose and xylose, respectively, compared to free-cell fermentations. Fermentation with glucose and xylose mixture (1:1) produced 50.37 ± 0.04 g L−1 butyric acid with a yield of 0.38 ± 0.02 g g−1 and productivity of 0.34 ± 0.03 g L−1 h−1. Batch fermentation with corn husk hydrolysate produced 21.80 g L−1 butyric acid with a yield of 0.39 g g−1, comparable to those from glucose. Repeated-batch fermentations consistently produced 20.75 ± 0.65 g L−1 butyric acid with an average yield of 0.39 ± 0.02 g g−1 in three consecutive batches. An extractive fermentation process can be used to produce, separate, and concentrate butyric acid to > 30% (w/v) sodium butyrate at an economically attractive cost for application as an animal feed supplement.ConclusionA high concentration of total reducing sugars at ~ 50% (w/w) yield was obtained from corn husk after acid hydrolysis. Stable butyric acid production from corn husk hydrolysate was achieved in repeated-batch fermentation with C. tyrobutyricum immobilized in a FBB, demonstrating that corn husk can be used as an economical substrate for butyric acid production.

Highlights

  • Butyric acid is an important chemical currently produced from petrochemical feedstocks

  • We evaluated the feasibility of using corn husk, an agricultural residue obtained from the corn field, as the feedstock for butyric acid production

  • Preparation of corn husk hydrolysate Acid or alkali pretreatment at high temperatures is widely used to facilitate the hydrolysis of lignocellulosic biomass [34, 35]

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Summary

Introduction

Butyric acid is an important chemical currently produced from petrochemical feedstocks. Using renewable biomass as the feedstock to produce butyric acid via fermentation can provide an attractive alternative and alleviate concerns of future scarcity and environmental impacts of fossil fuels. Recent fermentation process studies for bio-production of butyric acid have focused on C. tyrobutyricum using various substrates, including glucose, xylose [12,13,14], sucrose [15], cane molasses [16], corn meal [17], Jerusalem artichoke [18], and brown algae [19]. Since carbon source accounts for a large proportion of raw material costs, secondgeneration biorefineries focus on using abundant, cheap, renewable lignocellulosic biomass to produce biofuels and bio-based chemicals, including butyric acid [8, 20, 21]. The feasibility of using agricultural residues, including wheat straw [22], corn fiber [23], oilseed rape straw [24], and sugarcane bagasse [25], for butyric acid production have been studied and reported

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