Title of article :
Comparison of lab, pilot, and industrial scale low consistency mechanical refining for improvements in enzymatic digestibility of pretreated hardwood
Author/Authors :
Jones، نويسنده , , Brandon W. and Venditti، نويسنده , , Richard and Park، نويسنده , , Sunkyu and Jameel، نويسنده , , Hasan، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages :
7
From page :
514
To page :
520
Abstract :
Mechanical refining has been shown to improve biomass enzymatic digestibility. In this study industrial high-yield sodium carbonate hardwood pulp was subjected to lab, pilot and industrial refining to determine if the mechanical refining improves the enzymatic hydrolysis sugar conversion efficiency differently at different refining scales. Lab, pilot and industrial refining increased the biomass digestibility for lignocellulosic biomass relative to the unrefined material. The sugar conversion was increased from 36% to 65% at 5 FPU/g of biomass with industrial refining at 67.0 kWh/t, which was more energy efficient than lab and pilot scale refining. There is a maximum in the sugar conversion with respect to the amount of refining energy. Water retention value is a good predictor of improvements in sugar conversion for a given fiber source and composition. Improvements in biomass digestibility with refining due to lab, pilot plant and industrial refining were similar with respect to water retention value.
Keywords :
Biochemical conversion , Mechanical refining , Enzymatic hydrolysis , Water retention value (WRV) , Hardwood biomass
Journal title :
Bioresource Technology
Serial Year :
2014
Journal title :
Bioresource Technology
Record number :
1937173
Link To Document :
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