Ethanol is considered as one of the most promising next-generation automotive fuels, as it is carbon-neutral and can be produced from renewable resources, like lignocellulosic materials. However, owing to the characteristics of biomass, some technological barriers, such as delignification pretreatment, need to be addressed for an efficient conversion of wood to bioethanol. This communication will describe the mild and harmless delignification of wheat straw, carried out at room temperature and requiring only 10 minutes, using an environmentally-friendly HOCl-containing electrochemically activated water solution, synthesized from diluted brines. Holocellulose (i.e., the sum of cellulose and hemicellulose)-rich materials can be obtained with approximately 64% reduction of the initial lignin content. Both the absence of lignin degradation products, which could act as inhibitors during fermentation, and the promising ethanol yields confirm the potential of this alternative approach towards resolving the challenges to develop a sustainable and low-cost process.
Green electrochemical approach for delignification of wheat straw in second-generation bioethanol production
TAMBURINI, Elena;FERRO, Sergio;DE BATTISTI, Achille
2010
Abstract
Ethanol is considered as one of the most promising next-generation automotive fuels, as it is carbon-neutral and can be produced from renewable resources, like lignocellulosic materials. However, owing to the characteristics of biomass, some technological barriers, such as delignification pretreatment, need to be addressed for an efficient conversion of wood to bioethanol. This communication will describe the mild and harmless delignification of wheat straw, carried out at room temperature and requiring only 10 minutes, using an environmentally-friendly HOCl-containing electrochemically activated water solution, synthesized from diluted brines. Holocellulose (i.e., the sum of cellulose and hemicellulose)-rich materials can be obtained with approximately 64% reduction of the initial lignin content. Both the absence of lignin degradation products, which could act as inhibitors during fermentation, and the promising ethanol yields confirm the potential of this alternative approach towards resolving the challenges to develop a sustainable and low-cost process.I documenti in SFERA sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.