Article

Ethanol production using concentrated oak wood hydrolysates and methods to detoxify

Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology (impact factor: 1.94). 02/1999; 78(1):547-559. DOI:10.1385/ABAB:78:1-3:547 pp.547-559

ABSTRACT Ethanol production from concentrated oak wood hydrolysate was carried out to obtain a high ethanol concentration and a high
ethanol yield. The effect of added inhibitory compounds, which are typically produced in the pretreatment step of steam-explosion
on ethanol fermentation, was also examined. p-Hydroxybenzoic aldehyde, a lignin-degradation product, was the most inhibitory compound tested in this study. Compounds with
additional methyl groups had reduced toxicity and the aromatic acids were less toxic than the corresponding aldehydes. The
lignin-degradation products were more inhibitory than the sugar-derived products, such as furfural and 5-hydroxymethylfurfural
(HMF). Adaptation of yeast cells to the wood hydrolysate and detoxification methods, such as using charcoal and overlime,
had some beneficial effects on ethanol production using the concentrated wood hydrolysate. After treatment with charcoal and
low-temperature sterilization, the yeast cells could utilize the concentrated wood hydrolysate with 170 as well as 140 g/L
glucose, and produce 69.9 and 74.2 g/L ethanol, respectively, with a yield of 0.46–0.48 g ethanol/g glucose. In contrast,
the cells could not completely utilize untreated wood hydrolysate with 100 g/L glucose. Low-temperature sterilization, with
or without charcoal treatment, was very effective for ethanol production when highly concentrated wood hydrolysates were used.
Low-temperature sterilization has advantages over traditional detoxification methods, such as using overlime, ion exchange,
and charcoal, because of the reduction in the total cost of ethanol production.

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Keywords

additional methyl groups
 
aromatic acids
 
concentrated oak wood hydrolysate
 
concentrated wood hydrolysate
 
concentrated wood hydrolysates
 
corresponding aldehydes
 
detoxification methods
 
ethanol concentration
 
ethanol yield
 
inhibitory compound
 
ion exchange
 
lignin-degradation product
 
lignin-degradation products
 
Low-temperature sterilization
 
pretreatment step
 
steam-explosion
 
sugar-derived products
 
traditional detoxification methods
 
using charcoal
 
using overlime
 

Woo Gi Lee