4.0 Article

Impact of sulfuric acid pretreatment of durian peel on the production of fermentable sugar and ethanol

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE INDIAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 98, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jics.2021.100264

Keywords

Fermentation; Furan derivatives; Inhibitors; Optimization; Pretreated biomass; Value-added chemical

Funding

  1. King Mongkut's University of Technology North Bangkok [KMUTNB-FF-65-37, KMUTNB-PHD-64-02, KMUTNB-Post-65-05]

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Proper management of durian peel waste through sulfuric acid pretreatment optimized for enzymatic saccharification and bioethanol production can reduce environmental pollution, create value-added products, and contribute to a green economy by utilizing waste in a biorefinery concept.
After harvesting season, large amounts of durian peels were produced and uselessly disposed of by combustion or landfilling leading to environmental pollution and human health hazards. Proper management of these wastes is necessary to reduce not only an environmental problem but also to create value-added products. Herein, we optimized sulfuric acid pretreatment to promote enzymatic saccharification of durian peels and convert fermentable sugars to bioethanol. Three pretreatment parameters were optimized based on Response Surface Methodology (RSM), including acid concentration (0.5%-3.5%), temperature (60-140 degrees C), and time (20-100 min). At optimal pretreatment condition using 2.75% H2SO4, at 127.14 degrees C for 74.13 min, 0.53 g/g-biomass of reducing sugars were produced, which is 1.88 folds higher than the untreated durian peel. The pretreatment liquor and biomass hydrolysate were analyzed by Gas Chromatograph-Mass spectrometer (GC-MS), and fermentation inhibitors, i.e. acetic acid, furfural, and furan methanol, were identified in those fractions. Due to pretreatment at the optimal condition, a higher yield of reducing sugar was observed, and the production of ethanol from the pretreated biomass was 5.70 g/L (equivalent to 87.43% of theoretical yields). These findings demonstrated the potential of using durian waste in the biorefinery concept to achieve a concept of the green economy.

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