Article

Aerobic stability of distillers wet grains as influenced by temperature.

USDA-ARS-North Central Agricultural Research Laboratory Brookings, SD 57006, USA. .
Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture (impact factor: 1.44). 08/2012; DOI:10.1002/jsfa.5803
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT BACKGROUND: The storability of distillers wet grains (DWG) influences the economic, energetic, and carbon balances of fuel ethanol production, yet there are limited published data on the deterioration of DWG following its production. We used biogenic CO(2) production to assess the aerobic stability of DWG incubated at three temperatures (12 °C, 22 °C, 32 °C) and compared CO(2) production over time to the appearance of mold and changes in DWG color parameters. RESULTS: CO(2) production and mold colonization indicate that at temperatures near 12 °C, the aerobic stability of DWG was high and that it can be stored for at least a 10-day period. At temperatures close to 22 °C, the onset of increased microbial activity and visible mold colonization occurred between 4 and 7 days and both activity and mold ratings were very high by the ninth day in all three experiments. At 32 °C, 2 days may be a more appropriate limit for storage. CONCLUSION: Temperature and time interact in a nonlinear fashion that permits the prediction of DWG stability boundaries. The simple visual appearance of mold appears to be a reasonable indicator that correlates well (r = 0.694) with CO(2) production, a measure of the aerobic stability of DWG. Published 2012 by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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Keywords

10-day period
 
2 days
 
7 days
 
aerobic stability
 
biogenic CO(2)
 
distillers wet grains
 
DWG color parameters
 
DWG incubated
 
DWG stability boundaries
 
fuel ethanol production
 
John Wiley & Sons
 
Ltd
 
mold colonization
 
mold ratings
 
nonlinear fashion
 
reasonable indicator
 
simple visual appearance
 
three experiments
 
time interact
 
visible mold colonization