Abstract:
It is widely known that transportation sector is almost entirely dependent on fossil fuels;
primarily on petroleum-based fuels (liquefied petroleum gas, gasoline, compressed natural gas
and diesel fuel gas). Amount of petroleum availability is depleting day by day; therefore
alternatives are needed to produce liquid fuels for reducing the future effects of the shortage in
supply of transportation fuels. Term biofuel refers to solid (biochar), liquid (biodiesel,
bioethanol, and vegetable oil) or gaseous (biohydrogen, biosyngas, and biogas) fuels that are
mainly produced from biomass. They are renewable; most common is bioethanol (petrol
additive or gasoline substitute). Bioethanol has the potential to reduce both crude oil
consumption, and environmental pollution. Conventional resources for ethanol production
(grains majorly) compete directly with human food materials and give rise to food vs. fuel
conflict. Hence, it is essential to produce ethanol from various feedstocks and not depend solely
on grains and molasses.
Lignocellulosic feedstocks are obtained and harvested from agricultural wastes materials as
well as forest residues crops. It consists of cellulose (40-60%), hemicellulose (20-40%), and
lignin 10-25% on an average. Typically cellulose and hemicelluloses part comprise 2/3rd of the
total dry biomass. Carbohydrate part (cellulose and hemicellulose) of lignocellulosic biomass
can be saccharified to obtain soluble sugars and further convert it into ethanol by fermentation.
Major obstacles for the commercial lignocellulosic ethanol production include a. Maximum
amount of fermentable sugars (hexoses and pentoses) extraction from the lignocellulosic
feedstocks b. Suitable microorganisms (more tolerant toward fermentation inhibitors) and
fermentation techniques to ferment maximum amount of sugars present in the lignocellulosic
biomass hydrolysate for high ethanol yield and productivity, and c. Process integration
requirement to minimise the total number of steps involved in overall production.
Technological approach improvements and optimisation of various factors have been given
priority in various studies. Nevertheless, still, there are some challenges which need to be
adequately addressed in the development of a sustainable bioethanol industry.
To contribute in the pool of existing knowledge, we have tried to develop a technique which
can convert lignocellulosic biomass into fuel ethanol in just two process steps, with high
conversion efficiency and thus hope to bring down the ethanol production cost effectively. The
biomass chosen for the present work was kans grass biomass (Saccharum spontaneum), a
perennial C4 plant with high amount of carbohydrate (65.5%, w/w) compared to other
ii
lignocellulosic biomasses which can be converted to ethanol by suitable process technologies.
It grows throughout the year on marginal and wetlands. Once planted, harvesting can be done
many times for many years; re-plantation and watering are not required, ensuring the steady
supply of raw materials.
For saccharification, a unique technique called as ‘fractional hydrolysis’ has been developed
that gives us pentose and hexose sugars as separate hydrolysate fractions. Different physical
and chemical parameters (preheating time, liquid:solid/biomass loading, and number of stages)
have been optimised for the fractional hydrolysis process using one-variable-at-a-time (OVAT)
approach. The 8-stage fractional hydrolysis process was able to recover 84.88% total reducing
sugars from kans grass biomass with minimum toxics (1.27×10-2 g furfural and 3.04×10-2 g
phenolics) using sulphuric acid. To validate these results, the process was extended for other
cheap and easily available lignocellulosic feedstocks (wheat straw and sugarcane bagasse) and
inorganic acids (hydrochloric acid, phosphoric acid, and nitric acid) up to 30% concentration
(v/v). The compositional analysis of all the three selected biomasses in the present work
showed high cellulose and hemicelluloses content (63-66%). The fractional hydrolysis
technique has been proven independent of feedstock type and resulting in saccharification (%):
kans grass 84.88, sugarcane bagasse 82.55, and wheat straw 81.66. Among the acids used, TRS
recovery was very less using phosphoric acid whereas nitric acid resulted in maximum sugar
recovery, but the high cost makes it economically non- feasible. The results of both HCl and
H2SO4 were comparable but comparatively lower price of H2SO4 makes it as the most suitable
reagent for fractional hydrolysis process resulting in maximum sugar recovery with minimum
toxics. The fractional hydrolysis process was able to recover xylose and glucose sugar fractions
separately and called as xylose-rich fraction (XRF) and glucose-rich fraction (GRF)
respectively.
The structural characterisation of raw biomass, biomass after XRF removal, and fully treated
biomass showed marked differences during all the analyses. SEM images of biomass showed
surface distortion in the form of cracks and pores on the surface compared to the intact surface
of raw feedstocks. FESEM gave elemental composition at each stage with a high-resolution
images. SPM was used to measure the roughness analyses with 3-D imaging. FTIR
spectroscopic analysis of the biomass showed a decrease in the absorption peaks indicating the
loss of cellulose and hemicelluloses. XRD analysis was done to measure the changes in
crystallinity indices of feedstocks during the course of fractional hydrolysis. TGA provided
information about the pyrolysis temperatures of cellulose, hemicelluloses, and lignin present in
iii
the feedstocks along with weight loss %. These results validate the efficiency of 8-stage
fractional hydrolysis technique for the maximum sugar recovery with negligible toxics.
Based on these results, further fermentation studies have been carried out on kans grass
biomass using 8-stage fractional hydrolysis process with H2SO4. As there is no known naturally
occurring microorganism that can ferment pentose and hexose sugars simultaneously with the
same efficiency, hence getting the separate XRF and GRF is of tremendous advantage.
Moreover, fractional hydrolysis technique merges two different steps (pretreatment and
hydrolysis) into one. Also, the concentration of toxic compounds in hydrolysate was very low;
therefore, after saccharification, hydrolysate fractions can be taken directly for fermentation
without any detoxification, thereby cutting down the overall production cost.
In the fermentation part, Z. mobilis was selected for the hexose fermentation as it gives high
ethanol yield and productivity. Also, Z. mobilis is capable of producing almost a theoretical
amount of ethanol from glucose, via Entner-Doudoroff pathway under anaerobic condition and
tolerates high concentration of ethanol. Among xylose fermenting organisms, Candida
shehatae or Scheffersomyces shehatae has been found to ferment ethanol faster compared to
other organisms; also the specific rate of ethanol production was highest among pentosefermenting
yeasts.
The generation of two different sugar fractions as XRF and GRF from the kans grass hydrolysis
enabled xylose fermentation first and thereby eliminated lower ethanol tolerance problem of the
pentose- fermenting yeasts and catabolite repression of xylose by glucose consumption as the
preferred carbon source for S. shehatae. It also allowed to maintain the different aeration
requirements of two organisms in co-culture system (microaerobic for S. shehatae and strictly
anaerobic for Z. mobilis). Moreover, a single reactor can be used for the fermentation of both
the sugars. Initially, 2-step sequential co-culture fermentation was carried out using TRS
concentration up to 60 g/L in XRF and 200 g/L in GRF. The process resulted in 55.95 g/L of
ethanol with average yield coefficient of 0.41 and productivity of 0.65 g/L/h from the kans
grass biomass hydrolysate. It was observed that upon increasing sugar concentration, sugar
consumption rate decreases to a large extent. Moreover, ethanol concentration >55 g/L is very
difficult to obtain even on increasing glucose up to 200 g/L. Therefore, multi-step successive
glucose feeding co-culture system was developed to overcome these problems. A multi-step
glucose feeding co-culture system containing S. shehatae (for xylose fermentation) and Z.
mobilis (for glucose fermentation) provided high average ethanol yield, concentration and
productivity compared to the previous co-culture system. The average ethanol yield coefficient
iv
and overall volumetric ethanol productivity were found as 0.44 and 0.79 g/L/h respectively, and
79.59 g/L of ethanol concentration (up to stage 4) was achieved by utilising sugar up to 200
g/L.
The significance of the present study revealed that a novel “fractional hydrolysis” recovered the
maximum amount of soluble pentose and hexose sugars (84.88% of the total reducing sugars)
separately; direct from the lignocellulosic biomass with negligible toxic products generation.
Moreover, a single-reactor unique approach of co-culture fermentation using Z. mobilis (for
GRF fermentation) and S. shehatae (for XRF fermentation) by utilising maximum sugars
present in the kans grass hydrolysate may be able to reduce the overall bioethanol production
cost further with high ethanol yield (0.44) and concentration (79.59 g/L).