Comparison of Different Pretreatment Strategies for Ethanol Production of West African Biomass

Sune Tjalfe Thomsen, Jorge Enrique González Londoño, Jens Ejbye Schmidt, Zsófia Kádár*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

23 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Pretreating lignocellulosic biomass for cellulosic ethanol production in a West African setting requires smaller scale and less capital expenditure compared to current state of the art. In the present study, three low-tech methods applicable for West African conditions, namely Boiling Pretreatment (BP), Soaking in Aqueous Ammonia (SAA) and White Rot Fungi pretreatment (WRF), were compared to the high-tech solution of hydrothermal pretreatment (HTT). The pretreatment methods were tested on 11 West African biomasses, i.e. cassava stalks, plantain peelings, plantain trunks, plantain leaves, cocoa husks, cocoa pods, maize cobs, maize stalks, rice straw, groundnut straw and oil palm empty fruit bunches. It was found that four biomass’ (plantain peelings, plantain trunks, maize cobs and maize stalks) were most promising for production of cellulosic ethanol with profitable enzymatic conversion of glucan (>30 g glucan per 100 g total solids (TS)). HTT did show better results in both enzymatic convertibility and fermentation, but evaluated on the overall ethanol yield the low-tech pretreatment methods are viable alternatives with similar levels to the HTT (13.4–15.2 g ethanol per 100 g TS raw material).

Original languageEnglish
JournalApplied Biochemistry and Biotechnology
Volume175
Issue number5
Pages (from-to)2589-2601
Number of pages13
ISSN0273-2289
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 27 Dec 2014

Keywords

  • Biomass
  • Cellulosic ethanol
  • Lignocellulose
  • Pretreatment
  • West Africa

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Comparison of Different Pretreatment Strategies for Ethanol Production of West African Biomass'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this