Bioethanol Production from Horticultural Waste Using Crude Fungal Enzyme Mixtures Produced by Solid State Fermentation

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Abstract

It was desired to study efficient and simplified methods to convert organosolv-pretreated horticultural waste (HW) to ethanol fuel using cellulase produced under solid-state fermentation (SSF). The unprocessed cellulase crude (72.2 %) showed better reducing sugar yield using filter paper than the commercial enzyme blend (68.7 %). Enzymatic hydrolysis of organosolv-pretreated HW using the crude cellulase with 20 % solid content, enzyme loading of 15 FPU/g HW at 50 °C, and pH 5.5 resulted in a HW hydrolysate containing 25.06 g/L glucose after 72 h. Fermentation of the hydrolysate medium produced 12.39 g/L ethanol with 0.49 g/g yield from glucose and 0.062 g/g yield from HW at 8 h using Saccharomyces cerevisiae. This study proved that crude cellulase complex produced under SSF and organosolv pretreatment can efficiently convert woody biomass to ethanol without any commercial cellulase usage. © 2013 The Author(s).

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Xin, F., Zhang, H., & Wong, W. (2013). Bioethanol Production from Horticultural Waste Using Crude Fungal Enzyme Mixtures Produced by Solid State Fermentation. Bioenergy Research, 6(3), 1030–1037. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12155-013-9330-7

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