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

 

Date of this Version

2013

Citation

Dien, B.S., O’Byran, P.J., Hector, R., Item, L.B., Mitchell, R.B., Sarath, G., Vogel, K.P., Cotta, M. A. 2013. Conversion of switchgrass to ethanol using dilute ammonium hydroxice pretreatment. Environmental Technology 34:1837-1848.

Comments

U.S. government work

Abstract

Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) is a perennial C4 grass that is being developed as a bioenergy crop because it has high production yields and suitable agronomic traits. Five switchgrass biomass samples from upland and lowland switchgrass ecotypes harvested at different stages or maturity were used in this study. Switchgrass samples contained 317.0–385.0 g glucans/kg switchgrass dry basis (db) and 579.3–660.2 g total structural carbohydrates/kg switchgrass, db. Carbohydrate contents were greater for the upland ecotype versus lowland ecotype and increased with harvest maturity. Pretreatment of switchgrass with dilute ammonium hydroxide (8% w/w ammonium loading) at 170◦C for 20 min was determined to be effective for preparing switchgrass for enzymatic conversion to monosaccharides; glucose recoveries were 66.9–90.5% and xylose recoveries 60.1–84.2% of maximum and decreased with increased maturity at harvest. Subsequently, pretreated switchgrass samples were converted to ethanol by simultaneous saccharification and fermentation using engineered xylose-fermenting Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain YRH400. Ethanol yields were 176.2–202.0 l/Mg of switchgrass (db) and followed a similar trend as observed for enzymatic sugar yields.

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