1. Oxidative lime pretreatment of high-lignin biomass: poplar wood and newspaper
- Author
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Mark T. Holtzapple, Vincent S. Chang, Murlidhar Nagwani, and Chul-Ho Kim
- Subjects
Paper ,Energy-Generating Resources ,Carbohydrates ,Biomass ,Conservation of Energy Resources ,Bioengineering ,Cellulase ,Xylose ,engineering.material ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Biochemistry ,Lignin ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Botany ,Hardwood ,Food science ,Sugar ,Molecular Biology ,Lime ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Hydrolysis ,Oxides ,General Medicine ,Calcium Compounds ,Chemical Engineering ,Wood ,Reducing sugar ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,engineering ,Oxidation-Reduction ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Lime (Ca[OH]2) and oxygen (O2) were used to enhance the enzymatic digestibility of two kinds of high-lignin biomass: poplar wood and newspaper. The recommended pretreatment conditions for poplar wood are 150 degrees C, 6 h, 0.1 g of Ca(OH)2/g of dry biomass, 9 mL of water/g of dry biomass, 14.0 bar absolute oxygen, and a particle size of -10 mesh. Under these conditions, the 3-d reducing sugar yield of poplar wood using a cellulase loading of 5 filter paper units (FPU)/g of raw dry biomass increased from 62 to 565 mg of eq. glucose/g of raw dry biomass, and the 3-d total sugar (glucose + xylose) conversion increased from 6 to 77% of raw total sugars. At high cellulase loadings (e.g., 75 FPU/g of raw dry biomass), the 3-d total sugar conversion reached 97%. In a trial run with newspaper, using conditions of 140 degrees C, 3 h, 0.3 g of Ca(OH)2/g of dry biomass, 16 mL of water/g of dry biomass, and 7.1 bar absolute oxygen, the 3-d reducing sugar yield using a cellulase loading of 5 FPU/g of raw dry biomass increased from 240 to 565 mg of eq. glucose/g of raw dry biomass. A material balance study on poplar wood shows that oxidative lime pretreatment solubilized 38% of total biomass, including 78% of lignin and 49% of xylan; no glucan was removed. Ash increased because calcium was incorporated into biomass during the pretreatment. After oxidative lime pretreatment, about 21% of added lime could be recovered by CO2 carbonation.
- Published
- 2000