Tag Archives: alkaline pretreatment

269-276 M. Tutt, T. Kikas and J. Olt
Influence of different pretreatment methods on bioethanol production from wheat straw
Abstract |
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Influence of different pretreatment methods on bioethanol production from wheat straw

M. Tutt, T. Kikas and J. Olt

Institute of Technology, Estonian University of Life Sciences, Kreutzwaldi 56,
EE51014, Tartu, Estonia; e-mail: marti.tutt@emu.ee

Abstract:

Article investigates the influence of different pretreatment methods on sugar
conversion and bioethanol production. Different dilute acid and alkaline pretreatment methods
are compared to determine the best pretreatment method to give the highest glucose and ethanol
yields under the mild operating conditions. Wheat straw is used as a raw material as it is the
most widely grown cereal in Europe. Dilute sulfuric acid, hydrochloric acid, nitric acid and
potassium hydroxide solutions are used for pretreatment in combination with enzymatic
hydrolysis. Results indicate that the highest cellulose-to-glucose conversion rate of 316.7 g kg-1
of biomass is achieved by the pretreatment with nitric acid. The lowest glucose concentration of
221.3 g kg-1 is achieved by hydrochloric acid. In the wheat straw samples pretreated with
sulfuric acid and KOH, two different approaches are used. Solid phase of half the samples is
rinsed with water before adding enzymes, and the rest of the samples are not. The rinsed
samples pretreated with KOH solution give the highest ethanol yield of 104.3 g kg-1, while the
lowest ethanol yield is 67.7 g kg-1 from samples pretreated with HCl solution. Unrinsed samples
and rinsed samples pretreated with sulfuric acid give an ethanol yield of 78.7 g kg-1 and
92.0 g kg-1, respectively. These results indicate that rinsing the solid phase of the samples with
distilled water before hydrolysis removes most of the inhibitory compounds formed during the
pretreatment with dilute acid and increases fermentation efficiency by approximately 12%. 

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