4.2 Article

EVALUATION OF BIOETHANOL PRODUCTION FROM CAROB PODS BY Zymomonas mobilis AND Saccharomyces cerevisiae IN SOLID SUBMERGED FERMENTATION

Journal

PREPARATIVE BIOCHEMISTRY & BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 43, Issue 5, Pages 415-430

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/10826068.2012.741642

Keywords

bioethanol; carob pods; response surface methodology; saccharomyces cerevisiae; solid submerged fermentation; Zymomonas mobilis

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Bioethanol production from carob pods has attracted many researchers due to its high sugar content. Both Zymomonas mobilis and Saccharomyces cerevisiae have been used previously for this purpose in submerged and solid-state fermentation. Since extraction of sugars from the carob pod particles is a costly process, solid-state and solid submerged fermentations, which do not require the sugar extraction step, may be economical processes for bioethanol production. The aim of this study is to evaluate the bioethanol production in solid submerged fermentation from carob pods. The maximum ethanol production of 0.42gg(1) initial sugar was obtained for Z. mobilis at 30 degrees C, initial pH 5.3, and inoculum size of 5% v/v, 9g carob powder per 50mL of culture media, agitation rate 0rpm, and fermentation time of 40hr. The maximum ethanol production for S. cerevisiae was 0.40gg(1) initial sugar under the same condition. The results obtained in this research are comparable to those of Z. mobilis and S. cerevisiae performance in other culture mediums from various agricultural sources. Accordingly, solid submerged fermentation has a potential to be an economical process for bioethanol production from carob pods.

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