4.7 Article

The use of hemicellulose acid hydrolysate for hydrolysis of sugarcane trash and its fermentation for producing xylitol

Journal

INDUSTRIAL CROPS AND PRODUCTS
Volume 193, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.indcrop.2022.116163

Keywords

Acid hydrolysis; Autoclave; Microwave; Xylose extraction; Xylitol

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This study successfully extracted xylose from sugarcane trash through optimizing the acid hydrolysis process and further produced xylitol. The results show that using the hydrolysate in a stepwise and repeated manner can increase the concentration of xylose. Additionally, specific yeast strains were able to produce xylitol regardless of the presence of high concentrations of inhibitors.
Through the biorefinery process, xylose can be derived from lignocellulosic biomass waste, such as sugarcane trash (ST). Acid hydrolysis of biomass is one of the potential methods to be applied for producing xylose. This study aimed to optimize the stepwise and repeated use of hydrolysate in the acid hydrolysis of ST with the assistance of an autoclave and microwave digester for xylose production, which was further used to produce xylitol. Step 1 involved hydrolysis with oxalic acid in an autoclave, while Step 2 used hydrolysate from Step 1 in a microwave digester with a new ST feedstock. Meyerozyma caribbica InaCC Y67 was used to examine the fermentation of hemicellulose hydrolysate obtained under ideal hydrolysis conditions to produce xylitol. The results show that the optimum conditions for xylose production are a S/L ratio of 1:10, 2% oxalic acid, and 60 min of heating in Step 1, followed by 7.5 min at 180 degrees C using the hydrolysate from Step 1. The repeated use of hydrolysate may increase the concentration of xylose in the hydrolysate. The final xylose concentration obtained in Step 2 hydrolysis (35.2 g/L) is approximately twice that of Step 1 (14.6 g/L). The yeast M. caribbica InaCC Y67 successfully produced xylitol (6.49 g/L) regardless of the presence of high concentrations of inhibitors in this non-detoxified hydrolysate. These results show that ST can be a potential source of xylose for xylitol synthesis through a stepwise hydrolysis and repeated use of hydrolysate.

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