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Acetosolv delignification of Dichrostachys cinerea biomass for ethanol production

The interest in production of fuel ethanol from lignocellulosic materials is continuouslyincreasing due to the urgency of finding non-food substrates for production of bio-fuels.Marabou (Dichrostachys cinerea) is one of the abundant lignocellulosic bio-resources in Cuba,and it could be useful to produce bio-ethanol. Pre-treatment is an important step to produceethanol from lignocellulosic materials since it allows the separation of cellulose, hemicelluloseand lignin, and activates cellulose towards enzymatic hydrolysis. During the past few years,organosolv methods have been reported for effective separation of the main components oflignocellulosic materials and improvement of the enzymatic hydrolysis of cellulose. By usingacetosolv method lignin is separated under mild conditions and many of the lignin properties arewell preserved.The present work was aimed to perform a chemical characterisation of marabou biomass and toevaluate acetosolv delignification of the material. In this work the content of moisture, ash,extractives, easy-to-hydrolyze polysaccharides, difficult-to-hydrolyze polysaccharides, andKlason lignin of marabou biomass were analyzed. Klason lignin of the marabou biomass was23.4% of the mass. Acetosolv delignification was performed at normal boiling temperature(NBT) and 121oC, using 50-50, 70-30 and 90-10 acetic acid – water mixtures with 10% of solidsload during 1h. Hydrochloric acid (0.2g / 100g of mixture) was used as catalyst. Thedelignification of marabou biomass was also evaluated for the combination of dilute acid prehydrolysis(DAPH) and acetosolv with the same reaction conditions. This investigation provedthat acetosolv pretreatment was effective for solubilizing lignin contained in marabou biomass.The degree of lignin solubilisation increased with increasing acetic acid concentration in thereaction mixture. Lignin removals above 80% were achieved consistently both at NBT and121oC with 90% acetic acid, while only around 44.6 and 6.8% of the initial lignin was removedusing, respectively, 70 and 50% acetic acid at 121oC. The effect of temperature ondelignification was only marginal when acetosolv was conducted with 90% acetic acid, but itwas remarkable for lower acetic acid concentrations. A two-fold decrease of lignin removal wasobserved for the NBT acetosolv compared with the process performed at 121oC using both 70and 50% acetic acid. The insertion of a DAPH step prior to acetosolv considerably improvedlignin removal using 70 and 50% acetic acid at both temperatures, but its effect on the processesusing 90% acetic acid was minimal. High lignin yields were achieved upon its precipitation fromacetosolv liquors.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:UPSALLA1/oai:DiVA.org:hb-19582
Date January 2009
CreatorsPrabhakar Soudham, Venkata
PublisherHögskolan i Borås, Institutionen Ingenjörshögskolan, University of Borås/School of Engineering
Source SetsDiVA Archive at Upsalla University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeStudent thesis, info:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesis, text
Formatapplication/pdf
Rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
RelationMagisteruppsats,

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