Sierra Ramirez, Rocio (2005-12). Long-term lime pretreatment of poplar wood. Master's Thesis. Thesis uri icon

abstract

  • Lignocellulosic biomass (e.g., poplar wood) provides a unique and sustainable resource
    for environmentally safe organic fuels and chemicals. The core of this study is the
    pretreatment step involved in bioconversion processes. Pretreatment is required to realize
    high yields vital to commercial success. The focus of the pretreatment step is to
    methodically change key features of the biomass to favor enzymatic hydrolysis.
    This work assesses the compositional changes due to oxidative and non-oxidative longterm
    lime pretreatment of poplar wood (up to 4 weeks of pretreatment) at mild
    temperatures (25?C to 65?C), and their effect on the enzymatic yield of glucan and xylan.
    The most important pretreatment yield of lignin was 54 g lignin remaining/100 g lignin
    in raw biomass, and was accomplished for 4-week lime pretreatment at 65?C in oxidative
    conditions. The corresponding pretreatment yields of glucan and xylan were 85.9 g glucan
    recovered/100 g glucan in raw biomass and 80.2 g xylan recovered/100 g xylan in raw
    biomass respectively.
    For poplar wood oxidatively pretreated with lime for 4 weeks at 65?C and
    enzymatically hydrolyzed with an enzyme loading of 15 FPU/g glucan in raw biomass
    during a 3-day period, the best overall yields of glucan and xylan, were 80.7 g glucan
    hydrolyzed/100 g glucan in raw biomass and 66.9 g xylan hydrolyzed/100 g xylan in raw
    biomass respectively. The corresponding hydrolysis yields were 94.0 g glucan
    hydrolyzed/100 g glucan in treated biomass and 83.5 g xylan hydrolyzed/100 g xylan in
    treated biomass respectively.
    Because there is a previous study of long-term lime pretreatment of corn stover (Kim,
    2004), the data obtained in this work show the effect of using woody lignocellulose as
    substrate. From the comparison, resulted that in the case of poplar wood oxidatively pretreated at
    65?C for 4 weeks, less lignin was removed and more carbohydrates were solubilized,
    however the hydrolysis yield of glucan was almost equal and the hydrolysis yield of xylan
    was higher than the reported by Kim for corn stover oxidatively pretreated at 55?C for 4
    weeks. The overall yield of glucan resulted lower in the case of poplar wood because of the
    lower pretreatment yield of glucan. Thus, it is important to complete the mass balances
    including an analysis on the pretreatment liquor to determine if the solubilized glucan was
    degraded.

publication date

  • December 2005