4.7 Article

Development of modified HCH-1 kinetic model for long-term enzymatic cellulose hydrolysis and comparison with literature models

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY FOR BIOFUELS
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13068-019-1371-5

Keywords

Enzymatic cellulose hydrolysis; Simulation; HCH-1; Model comparison; Sensitivity analysis

Funding

  1. Michael O'Connor Chair II Endowment
  2. University Libraries
  3. Office of the Vice President for Research

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BackgroundEnzymatic hydrolysis is a major step for cellulosic ethanol production. A thorough understanding of enzymatic hydrolysis is necessary to help design optimal conditions and economical systems. The original HCH-1 (Holtzapple-Caram-Humphrey-1) model is a generalized mechanistic model for enzymatic cellulose hydrolysis, but was previously applied only to the initial rates. In this study, the original HCH-1 model was modified to describe integrated enzymatic cellulose hydrolysis. The relationships between parameters in the HCH-1 model and substrate conversion were investigated. Literature models for long-term (>48h) enzymatic hydrolysis were summarized and compared to the modified HCH-1 model.ResultsA modified HCH-1 model was developed for long-term (>48h) enzymatic cellulose hydrolysis. This modified HCH-1 model includes the following additional considerations: (1) relationships between coefficients and substrate conversion, and (2) enzyme stability. Parameter estimation was performed with 10-day experimental data using -cellulose as substrate. The developed model satisfactorily describes integrated cellulose hydrolysis data taken with various reaction conditions (initial substrate concentration, initial product concentration, enzyme loading, time). Mechanistic (and semi-mechanistic) literature models for long-term enzymatic hydrolysis were compared with the modified HCH-1 model and evaluated by the corrected version of the Akaike information criterion. Comparison results show that the modified HCH-1 model provides the best fit for enzymatic cellulose hydrolysis.ConclusionsThe HCH-1 model was modified to extend its application to integrated enzymatic hydrolysis; it performed well when predicting 10-day cellulose hydrolysis at various experimental conditions. Comparison with the literature models showed that the modified HCH-1 model provided the best fit.

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