U.S. Department of Agriculture: Agricultural Research Service, Lincoln, Nebraska

 

Date of this Version

2010

Citation

Anderson, W.F., B.S. Dien, H.J.G. Jung, K.P. Vogel, P.J. Weimer. 2010. Effects of forage quality and cell wall constituents of bermudagrass on biochemical conversion to ethanol. BioEnergy Research 3:225-237.

Comments

U.S. government work

Abstract

Bermuda grass is an attractive candidate as a feedstock for biofuel production because over four million hectares of Bermuda grass are already grown for forage in the Southern USA. Because both rumen digestion and biochemical conversion to ethanol depend upon enzymatic conversion of the cell wall polysaccharides into fermentable sugars, it is probable that grasses bred for increased forage quality would be more amenable for ethanol production. However, it is not known how variation in rumen digestibility and cell wall/fiber components correlates with efficiency of conversion to ethanol via fermentation. The objective of this research was to determine relationships between ethanol production evaluated by simultaneous saccharification and fermentation (SSF), 72-h in vitro ruminal dry matter digestibility (IVDMD), in vitro ruminal gas production after 24 and 96 h, and biomass composition for 50 genetically diverse Bermuda grass accessions. The Bermuda grass samples were subjected to standard 72-h IVDMD and forage fiber analyses. Also, in separate labs, gas production was measured in sealed volumecalibrated vials after 24 (NNG24) and 96 h (NNG96) of in vitro fermentation by ruminal fluid; ethanol and pentose sugar productions were measured from a bench-top SSF procedure; cell wall constituents were determined by the Uppsala Dietary Fiber Method; and total nitrogen, carbon, and ash concentrations were determined by using the LECO combustion method. Ethanol production was moderately correlated with IVDMD (r=0.55) and NNG96 (r=0.63) but highly correlated with NNG24 (r=0.93). Ethanol was negatively correlated with neutral detergent fiber (NDF; r=−0.53) and pentose sugars (r=−0.60), but not correlated with glucose content. Regression models indicated that NDF and cell wall pentose sugar concentrations had significant negative effects on ethanol production. Variation among entries for IVDMD was affected by variability of NDF, pentose sugar concentrations, and biomass nitrogen content. Variation in Klason lignin content had only minor negative impacts on ethanol production and IVDMD. Biochemical conversion efficiency of Bermuda grass by SSF can be best estimated by NNG24 but not by IVDMD.

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