Background
Type: Article

Ethanol and biogas production from birch by NMMO pretreatment

Journal: Biomass and Bioenergy (09619534)Year: February 2013Volume: 49Issue: Pages: 95 - 101
Goshadrou A.a Karimi K. Taherzadeh M.J.
DOI:10.1016/j.biombioe.2012.12.013Language: English

Abstract

Birch wood was pretreated with N-methylmorpholine-N-oxide (NMMO or NMO) followed by enzymatic hydrolysis and fermentation to ethanol or digestion to biogas. The pretreatments were carried out with NMMO (wNMMO = 85%) at 130 °C for 3 h, and the effects of drying after the pretreatment were investigated. Enzymatic hydrolysis of the untreated wood resulted in 8%-10% of theoretical glucose yield after 4 days hydrolysis, while the NMMO pretreatment improved this yield to 91%. Consequently, ethanol production yield from NMMO-pretreated materials resulted in around 9-fold improvement compared to the untreated wood. On the other hand, drying of the pretreated wood had a negative impact and decreased the yield of enzymatic hydrolysis by 4%-10%. Digestion of the untreated wood with thermophilic bacteria resulted in maximum methane yield of 158 cm3 g-1 of VS in 30 days, while the NMMO pretreatment improved the methane yield up to 232 cm3 g-1 of VS (80% of the theoretical biogas yield) in just 9 days. © 2012 Elsevier Ltd.


Author Keywords

Betula pubescenceCrystallinityDryingEnzymatic hydrolysisN-methylmorpholine-N-oxideSwelling capacity

Other Keywords

BetulaBiogasCrystallinityDryingEnzymolysisMethaneSwellingWoodBacteria (microorganisms)EthanolGlucoseBetula pubescenceBiogas productionBirch woodCrystallinitiesEthanol productionGlucose yieldsMethane YieldN-Methylmorpholine-N-oxidePre-TreatmentPre-treatmentsSwelling capacitiesThermophilic bacteriadigestionenzyme activityfermentationhydrolysisEnzymatic hydrolysis