4.6 Review

Advanced Bioethanol Production: From Novel Raw Materials to Integrated Biorefineries

Journal

PROCESSES
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pr9020206

Keywords

biofuels; biochemical route; biomass fractionation; bio-based products

Funding

  1. Regional Government of Madrid [S2018/EMT-4344]
  2. Spanish MICIU [ENE2017-85819-C2-2-R]
  3. Processes Journal (ISSN) [2227-9717]

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This review discusses the advantages, recent progress, and key technologies related to advanced bioethanol production, including the use of novel biomass sources, improved pretreatment technologies, new enzyme catalysts, and microbial strains. It also explores relevant biorefinery approaches to enhance the cost-competitiveness and sustainability of bioethanol production processes.
The production of so-called advanced bioethanol offers several advantages compared to traditional bioethanol production processes in terms of sustainability criteria. This includes, for instance, the use of nonfood crops or residual biomass as raw material and a higher potential for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. The present review focuses on the recent progress related to the production of advanced bioethanol, (i) highlighting current results from using novel biomass sources such as the organic fraction of municipal solid waste and certain industrial residues (e.g., residues from the paper, food, and beverage industries); (ii) describing new developments in pretreatment technologies for the fractionation and conversion of lignocellulosic biomass, such as the bioextrusion process or the use of novel ionic liquids; (iii) listing the use of new enzyme catalysts and microbial strains during saccharification and fermentation processes. Furthermore, the most promising biorefinery approaches that will contribute to the cost-competitiveness of advanced bioethanol production processes are also discussed, focusing on innovative technologies and applications that can contribute to achieve a more sustainable and effective utilization of all biomass fractions. Special attention is given to integrated strategies such as lignocellulose-based biorefineries for the simultaneous production of bioethanol and other high added value bioproducts.

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