4.7 Article

The use of thermochemical pretreatments to improve the anaerobic biodegradability, and biochemical methane potential of the sugarcane bagasse

Journal

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL
Volume 248, Issue -, Pages 363-372

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.cej.2014.03.060

Keywords

Anaerobic biodegradability; Hydrolysis; Lignocellulosic waste; Pretreatment; Sugar and ethanol industry

Funding

  1. Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation (Embrapa) [Call 01/2009]
  2. Ceara State Foundation for the Support of Scientific and Technological Development (FUNCAP)
  3. Federal Institute of Ceard State (IFCE)

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Lignocellulosic material can be used as biomass for power generation via biogas if it is pretreated to improve the anaerobic hydrolysis step, by either solubilising the hemicellulose (total reducing groups, TRG) or removing lignin (Lig), with consequent exposition of the cellulose fibre to anaerobic degradation. We evaluated the effects of acid, alkaline, and hydrothermal pretreatments on sugarcane bagasse to increase its anaerobic biodegradability and biochemical methane potential (BMP). The highest sugar production (31.14 g TRG/g substrate) was achieved with the acid pretreatment in 6.4 min at 138 C, with a HCl concentration of 0.63 M, and the highest lignin removal (23.24 g Lig/g substrate) was found with the alkaline pretreatment after 47 min at 184 C and a NaOH concentration of 0.8 M. However, the best values of BMP (197.5 L CH4/kg substrate) and anaerobic biodegradability (27.4%) were achieved by the hydrothermal pretreatment after 10 min at 200 C, which was sufficient to generate power of 6.8 MJ/kg substrate. The results showed that the methane derived from the anaerobic digestion of these hydrolysates produced less energy than the direct burning of the dry bagasse. Thus, the recovered lignin, with its high added-value, may be used to improve environmental sustainability and profitability of the process. In this case, the alkaline pretreatment extracted 80.2% of the lignin present in the bagasse, and the hydrolysate could generate 313.4 L CH4/kg substrate. (c) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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