The present invention relates to a process for production of ethanol from lignocellulosic biomass.
Simultaneous Saccharification fermentation/co-fermentation (SSF/SSCF) removes sugar inhibition on enzymatic hydrolysis thus increases the hydrolysis sugar yield and reduces contamination risk. Moreover, SSF/SSCF reduces the overall reaction time and reactor volume (Kristensen et al., 2009). SSF/SSCF sacrifices the optimal conditions for both enzymatic hydrolysis and fermentation. Typically enzymatic hydrolysis and fermentation in SSF system the temperature is kept at 37-42° C. as a compromise for better enzymatic hydrolysis and fermentation (Dien et al., 2003b). In addition, SSF/SSCF introduces a new inhibitor (ethanol) for enzymatic hydrolysis. But the inhibitory effect from ethanol is much lower compared to cellobiose or glucose (Taherzadeh & Karimi, 2007).
The major advantage of Separate Hydrolysis and fermentation/co-fermentation (SHF/SHCF) compared to SSF/SSCF is that enzymatic hydrolysis and fermentation can be carried out at their own optimal conditions (Taherzadeh & Karimi, 2007). However, enzymes during hydrolysis is easily inhibited by its end-products (sugars), especially during high solid loading enzymatic hydrolysis (Kristensen et al., 2009; Philippidis & Smith, 1995), which led to sluggish hydrolysis and resulted into enhanced hydrolysis time and high enzyme loading to achieve high sugar conversions. Another problem of this process is the high risk of contamination during enzymatic hydrolysis due to the long reaction time and high sugar concentrations (Taherzadeh & Karimi, 2007). Enzymatic hydrolysis is the limiting step for SHF, which determines the overall ethanol yield (Lau & Dale, 2009).
US 20060014260 disclose a simultaneous saccharification and fermentation (SSF) process for the bioconversion of cellulose into ethanol. It discloses that the reaction mixture comprises of slurry comprising cellulosic substrate, an enzyme and a fermentation agent. The reaction mixture is treated at a temperature between about 30° C. and 48° C. and a pH between about 4.0 and 6.0, along with agitation for a period of about 30 minutes to several hours or days.
US 20100268000 A1 discloses method for producing one or more fermentation end-products by fermenting a lignocellulosic biomass comprising hexose and pentose saccharides. Further it discloses using Saccharomyces cerevisiae along with fermentation medium supplement selected from the group consisting of a fatty acid, a surfactant, a chelating agent, vitamins, minerals, pH modifiers, yeast extract, and salts such as ammonium salts and salts of magnesium.
In present invention of modified SSCF process, enzymatic hydrolysis is preceded by mainly C5 sugar fermentation and low enzymatic hydrolysis and succeeds by mainly C6 sugar fermentation at different temperature and duration. This resulted into higher ethanol titer at short time of combined hydrolysis and fermentation. Present invention is advantageous over conventional SSCF because initial free sugars and oligosaccharides in the pretreated biomass was targeted for fermentation which reduces the enzymatic feedback inhibition and optimum temperature were used for hydrolysis and fermentation, which resulted into higher ethanol yield at low dose of enzyme at short time interval.
In conventional fermentation practice glucose concentration is always higher than xylose concentration. So in this situation, yeast mostly prefers glucose fermentation which ultimately reduces the xylose fermentation efficiency and prolongs the xylose fermentation time.
In the present study free xylose and other oligosaccharides are targeted initial stage of fermentation which ultimately reduces enzymatic feedback inhibition. Due to which enzyme concentration was reduced to half than the conventional practice and further reduced fermentation time to one third and 30 h less than separate hydrolysis and fermentation (SHF) and conventional SSCF, respectively. This makes the process more acceptable for commercial practice.
Accordingly, present invention provides a process for production of ethanol from a lignocellulosic biomass comprising;
In one of the feature, present invention provides a process for production of ethanol from a lignocellulosic biomass comprising;
In one of the feature of the present invention, the fermentation of C5 sugar is carried out at temperature in the range of 30° C.-35° C. for 16-20 hours or any other temperature which favors fermentation over hydrolysis, when the xylose concentration is reduced to 6-7 g/l in fermentation broth the temperature of process is increased to 33 and 35° C. gradually and incubated at 2 h in each temperature for better hydrolysis and fermentation.
In another feature of the present invention, the fermentation of C6 sugar is carried out at temperature in the range of 35 to 37° C. for 6 to 10 hours or any other temperature which favors fermentation over hydrolysis.
In yet another feature of the present invention, the pre-treated biomass slurry is added in the fermenter system of step (i) without any detoxification.
In still another feature of the present invention, the process for production of ethanol from a lignocellulosic biomass additionally comprising adjusting pH of the slurry of step (i) to 5-5.5 with a pH adjuster.
In yet another feature of the present invention, the pH adjuster is selected from aqueous ammonium hydroxide, NaOH, KOH, and CaCO3 or substance which is alkaline in nature and increases pH.
In still another feature of the present invention, the nutrient is ammonium sulphate, MgSO4 or any other magnesium or ammonium salts.
In still another feature of the present invention, the cellulase enzyme is from fungal origin, β-glucosidase along with other accessory enzyme, wherein:
In yet another feature of the present invention, the co-fermenting (C6 and C5 sugar) microorganism is selected from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Pichia sp., Candida sp., and E. coli or any ethanogenic co-fermenting microorganism.
In yet another feature of the present invention, the C5 sugar is selected from xylose and C6 sugar is selected from glucose.
In yet another feature of the present invention, the fermentation of C6 sugar is stopped after 6 to 10 hours of fermentation.
In still another feature of the present invention, optionally other nutrient is used to enhance the final ethanol concentration and the other nutrient is selected from yeast extract, peptone and ammonium sulphate or any other nitrogen source for microorganism.
In still another feature of the present invention, the lignocellulosic biomass is selected from straw, wheat straw, sugarcane bagasse, cotton stalk, barley stalk, bamboo or any agriculture residues which contain cellulose or hemicellulose or both.
In one of the feature, present invention provides a process for production of ethanol from a lignocellulosic biomass comprising:
In yet another feature, present invention provides a process for production of ethanol from a lignocellulosic biomass comprising:
While the invention is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific embodiment thereof will be described in detail below. It should be understood, however that it is not intended to limit the invention to the particular forms disclosed, but on the contrary, the invention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternative falling within the scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
Definition:
For the purposes of this invention, the following terms will have the meaning as specified therein:
“Pre-treated biomass” or “Pretreatment of biomass” used herein clears away physical and chemical barriers that make native biomass recalcitrant and exposes cellulose for better enzymatic hydrolysis. In most of the pretreatment, chemical (acid or alkali) and physical (high temperature or pressure) parameters are used individually or in mixed manner to remove barriers for enzymatic hydrolysis and improve the enzymatic digestibility.
“Detoxification” used herein is the process where the inhibitors (toxic compound such hydroxymethyl furfural, furfural, acetic acids, formic acids etc.) produced during the pretreatment process are removed or neutralized from pre-treated biomass by chemical, physical or biological process.
“Cellulase enzyme” used herein is a mixed form of enzyme which is mostly composed of exo-hydrolase, endo-hydrolase and beta-glucosidase. This enzyme was mostly produced from fungal sources. Cellulase breaks down the cellulose molecule into monosaccharide and shorter polysaccharides or oligosaccharides. In the present invention the cellulase enzyme is selected from commercial available cellulase enzymes which are suitable for the purposes. More particularly commercial available cellulase enzyme CTec3 is used in the present invention.
“Free sugar” used herein is the monomeric form of sugar which are produced from the lignocellulosic biomass during the pretreatment. Free sugar in this process composed of mainly glucose and xylose.
“C5 sugars” used herein C5 sugars represented for Xylose. “Free C5 sugar” used herein is sugar (mostly xylose) released from the hemicelluloses during the pretreatment and some part in enzymatic hydrolysis.
“C5 fermentation” used herein is Xylose fermentation into ethanol.
“C6 sugar” used herein represents glucose.
“C6 fermentation” used herein is Glucose fermentation into ethanol.
“Nutrient” used herein is Ammonium hydroxide and MgSO4. Ammonium hydroxide used in this process has dual activity, it adjust the pH of the sulphuric acid (H2SO4) pretreated biomass and simultaneously converted to ammonium sulphate (ammonium ion (NH4−) combined with free sulphates (SO4−2) ions released from the sulphuric acid during the pretreatment. Ammonium sulphate ((NH4)2SO4) acts as a nitrogen source for yeast during fermentation. Another salt MgSO4 used in fermentation where, Mg+2 act as an essential enzyme cofactor and act as key structural component of most biological pathways. During fermentation Mg+2 plays a major role for proper functioning of fermenting enzymes in yeast.
The present invention discloses a method for production of ethanol from lignocellulosic biomass. In the present invention, free C5 sugar in pre-treated biomass is targeted first along with available low concentration of glucose for fermentation followed by enzymatic hydrolysis and C6 fermentation in sequential manner.
Xylan and Glucan are polymer of xylose and glucose respectively collectively called as holocellulose in lignocellulosic biomass. As per the physical property xylan and glucan are amorphous and crystalline in nature respectively. Due to the physical property, xylan gets breaks down to xylose when lignocellulosic biomass subjected to acid pretreatment but most of the glucan remain un-reacted. So in this process when the pretreated biomass is taken for fermentation, free form of xylose (30-35 g/L) (breakdown xylan) are present in the biomass which is targeted firstly by the co-fermenting microorganism for fermentation in presence of very less amount of glucose (<8-10 g/L, which is released during the pretreatment) at 30-35° C. The fermentation temperature is not adequate enough for the enzyme to breakdown of the glucan to glucose efficiently. So due to this the co-fermenting microorganism mostly targeted xylose (C5) sugar at the initial stage of fermentation.
The process, in accordance with the present invention, brings the C5 concentration about to dryness and brings down the total process time (both hydrolysis and fermentation) to 46 h which is about ⅓ of the conventional SHF (total process time 120 h which include 72 h Hydrolysis and 48 h Fermentation). Overall ethanol productivity is much higher than conventional SSCF process.
In accordance with the present invention, a method for production of ethanol from lignocellulosic biomass (see
Having described the basic aspects of the present invention, the following non-limiting examples illustrate specific embodiment thereof.
Pretreated biomass (slurry, TS approximately 24%) without any detoxification is introduced directly to the fermenter. The pH of the slurry was adjusted to 5.5 with aqueous ammonium solution (25% initial concentration). The pH adjusted slurry was fortified with 3 g/l MgSO4, cellulase enzyme (Commercial enzyme, 3.3FPU/TS) and co-fermenting Saccharomyces cerevisiae (1 g dry cell biomass/litre, xylose and glucose utilizing yeast). Required amount of water was added to the process to adjust the final biomass concentration to 20%. The whole process was incubated at 30° C. for 16 h for the fermentation with 200 rpm. When the free xylose concentration in the slurry comes near to 6-7 g/l, the temperature of the process was increased to 33° C. and 35° C., incubated for 2 h in each temperature for better hydrolysis and fermentation. After that temperature increased to 48° C. This step mainly required for rapid releases of glucose sugar from cellulose which converted simultaneously with hydrolysis to ethanol by yeast biomass. As the temperature was reached at desired target the process was allowed to maintain the required temperature (48° C.) for 23 h for better enzymatic hydrolysis. After this incubation the system was allowed to cool down to temperature 35° C. A second dose of co-fermenting S. cerevisiae (1 g dry cell biomass/liter) was inoculated to the system for the second stage of fermentation. The second fermentation was stopped after 6 h of fermentation. This process took 46 h incubation including fermentation and enzymatic hydrolysis. The results of this experiment are represented by
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Using conventional SSCF approach of ethanol production from pretreated biomass, saccharification at 50° C. for 5 h and followed by fermentation and hydrolysis at 41° C. by a moderately thermo tolerant wild yeast S. cerevisiae up to 24 h. After this fermentation another yeast co-fermenting S. cerevisiae was inoculated to the fermentation process. In this approach the xylose utilization after the glucose fermentation was comparatively slow as compare to the above process and about 10 g/l residual xylose was observed after 72 h. This process of fermentation brings the lower ethanol titer after the 72 h of fermentation using even higher enzyme dosage. The results of this experiment are represented by
Saccharomyces cerevisiae (1 g/l),
Saccharomyces cerevisiae (1 g/l)
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
201821008982 | Mar 2018 | IN | national |