4.8 Article

Autohydrolysis pretreatment of Coastal Bermuda grass for increased enzyme hydrolysis

Journal

BIORESOURCE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 100, Issue 24, Pages 6434-6441

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biortech.2008.12.068

Keywords

Autohydrolysis; Coastal Bermuda grass; Enzymatic hydrolysis; Sugar analysis

Funding

  1. North Carolina State University, NCBC [2007-MRG-1106]

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Coastal Bermuda grass (GBG) was pretreated using an autohydrolysis process with different temperatures and times, and the pretreated materials were enzymatically hydrolyzed using a mixture of cellulase, xylanase and beta-glucosidase with different enzyme loadings to evaluate sugar yields. Compared with untreated CBG, autohydrolysis pretreatments at all elevated temperatures and residence times tested enhanced enzymatic digestibility of both cellulose and hemicellulose. Increasing the temperature and residence time also helps to solubilize hemicelluloses, with 83.3% of the hemicelluloses solubilized at 170 degrees C for 60 min treatment. However, higher temperatures and longer times resulted in an overall lower sugar recovery when considering monosaccharides in the prehydrolyzate combined with the enzyme hydrolyzate. Autohydrolysis at 150 degrees C for 60 min provided the highest overall sugar yield for the entire process. A total of 43.3 g of sugars, 70% of the theoretical sugar yield, can be generated from 100 g CBG, 15.0 g of monosaccharide in the prehydrolyzate and 28.3 g in the enzyme hydrolyzate. The conversion efficiency could be further improved by optimizing enzyme dosages and xylanases:cellulases ratio and pretreatment conditions to minimize sugar degradation. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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