The present invention relates to a method for fractionation of biomass components, more particularly, the present invention relates to a method for separating biomass into three major components such as lignin, cellulose, hemi-cellulose, wherein the cellulose thus obtained exist in a form which is amenable enzymatic saccharification.
Lignocellulosic biomass must be treated to realize high yields, which is vital to commercial success in biological conversion. Better pre-treatment can reduce the use of expensive enzymes thus makes the process economically viable. Although many biological, chemical and physiological methods have been tried over the years, pre-treatment advances are still needed to reduce the overall cost.
A large number of literatures available on the use of organo-solvent to separate lignin, cellulose and hemicellulose from biomass, however, those technologies suffer from a major drawback. The cellulose recovered using the conventional processes, suffers from an inefficient saccharification and significant amount of cellulose loss as a degradation product. These leads to the higher process cost. In addition, cellulose either separated by any of the prior technologies requires huge enzyme loading or excess time to be get saccharified.
Till date all the existing processes involve organic solvents, water and acids to separate lignin, cellulose and hemi-cellulose but the Applicant with their best effort could not find any references that disclose a use of a catalyst to increase the efficiency of downstream process i.e. subsequent saccharification of cellulose. Briefly, the conventional processes, the lignin recovery and hemicellulose hydrolysis efficiency is not high and the cellulose obtained suffers from inefficient enzymatic saccharification.
The primary object of the present invention is to develop a process to separate cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin with high purity and yield.
Another object of the invention is to obtain cellulose in such a form that subsequent saccharification becomes highly efficient thereby render downstream saccharification process economically viable.
Yet another object of the present invention is to provide a reactor to perform the instant method.
Accordingly, the present invention provides a process for separating lignin, cellulose and hemi-cellulose and cellulose thus obtained from biomass in a form amenable to complete enzymatic hydrolysis, said process comprising contacting the biomass with a mixture of an organic solvent immiscible in water, an acid and a metal salt catalyst dissolved in the acidic water solution under predetermined temperature and pressure and filtering the reaction mixture under pressure to separate the dissolved lignin, hemicellulose in the solvent and aqueous phase respectively and leaving behind pure cellulose.
In an aspect of the present invention, the water immiscible solvent selected from a group comprising higher alcohols like butanol, iso-amyl alcohol.
In another aspect of the present invention, the concentration of the water immiscible organic solvent in the reaction mixture is in the range of 40% to 80%.
In still another aspect of the present invention, the acid is mineral acid.
In yet another aspect of the present invention the metal salt catalyst selected from a group comprising copper sulphate, ferrous sulphate, Ferrous ammonium sulphate, Nickel sulphate, Sodium sulphate, ferric chloride.
In a further aspect of the present invention, the acid concentration is about 1% (v/v).
In a further more aspect of the present invention the catalyst concentration is in the range of 0.1% to 3% (w/v)
In another aspect of the present invention the predetermined temperature is in the range of 120°-220° C.
In still another aspect of the present invention, the predetermined pressure is in the range of 1.5-20 Bar.
In yet another aspect of the present invention the process is carried out for a period of 10 to 30 min.
The present invention also provides a system for obtaining cellulose from biomass comprising:
In an aspect of the present invention, the first inlet of the reactor chamber is in fluid flow communication with a vessel, which contains mixture of an organic solvent.
In another aspect of the present invention, the receiver is in fluid flow communication with the boiler.
In one more aspect of the present invention, the steam distillation assembly comprises a condenser and a receiver for collecting the condensate from the condenser.
Accordingly, the present invention discloses a process of separating various components of biomass such as lignin, cellulose and hemicellulose with higher yield.
One of the preferred aspect of the instant process is to obtain cellulose in a form, which is highly amenable to enzymatic degradation.
One more advantageous aspect of the present invention is that the process involves a single step process thereby reduce the energy involvement.
The instant process comprising, contacting the biomass with a mixture of an organic solvent immiscible in water, a mild acid and a catalyst dissolved in the acid solution under predetermined temperature and pressure and then filtering under pressure to separate the dissolved lignin, hydrolyzed hemciellulose and leaving behind a residue rich in cellulose, wherein the separated lignin and hemicellulose is in the solvent and aqueous phase respectively.
The present process efficiently degraded lignocellulosic biomass such as sweet sorghum bagasse, rice straw, wheat straw, sugar cane bagasse, corn stover, miscanthus, switch grass and various agricultural residues. Preferably, the materials are comminuted into particles before treatment.
In one more aspect of the process, lignocellulosic biomass is treated with mixture of a water immiscible solvent, preferably butanol, a mild acid and an additional catalyst dissolved in the acid to dissolve a major portion of the lignin, hydrolyze the hemicellulose and obtain a residue that is rich in cellulose, which is highly reactive.
The present process utilizes a mixture of a water immiscible solvent, a mild acid and a water soluble metal salt as catalyst. The ratio of solvent to acidic water is 40:60 to 80:20 and preferably 60:40 and wherein the water contains not more than 1% acid. Further, the concentration of the catalyst dissolved in the water is in the range of 0.1% to 3 wt %.
The water immiscible solvent used is preferably an aliphatic alcohol with at least 4 carbon atoms preferably butanol.
The water soluble metal catalyst is selected from a group comprising metal salts like copper sulphate, ferrous sulphate, ferrous ammonium sulphate, Nickel sulphate, Sodium sulphate, Ferric chloride etc.
The digestion preferably carried out at an elevated temperature and pressure. Typically, the digestion mixture heated in the reactor to a temperature in the range of about 120° C. to 220° C. for a period in the range of 10 to 30 minutes. The pressure maintained during digestion is in the range of 7.5 Bar to 20 Bar and preferably 15 Bar.
The lignocellulosic biomass, organic solvent immiscible in water, acidic water and metal salt catalyst taken in reactor, wherein the solid loading of biomass is about 15% with respect to the liquid. The reactor heated to raise a predetermined temperature by direct steam injection from the boiler. After holding for preferably 10 min in the desired condition, the reaction mixture filtered under pressure. The filtrate separated into two phases, the organic phase contains the lignin dissolved in it and the aqueous phase has the hemicellulose in the form of pentose sugars. The residue left behind in the reactor is rich in cellulose.
The lignin dissolved in the solvent can be easily recovered by a simple steam distillation process and the lignin obtained thereby is its native form.
The hemicellulose fraction, which obtained as pentose sugars in the aqueous fraction, has minimal sugar degradation products.
The residue obtained is rich in reactive cellulose, which is evident from its susceptibility to enzymatic saccharification.
The process of the present invention can be performed by a system for obtaining cellulose from biomass as shown in
As can be observed from
A steam distillation assembly for the removing traces of solvent in the aqueous fraction and precipitating the lignin in the solvent fraction. The steam distillation assembly comprises a condenser and a second receiver (R102). The condenser is in flow communication with the first receiver (R101) and provides the outlet to the second receiver (R102).
A further description of the invention is given in examples below, which should not however be construed to limit the scope of the present invention.
100 g of sweet sorghum bagasse added to the reactor. To this bagasse 60% butanol in 1% sulphuric acid for control run and 60% butanol in 1% sulphuric acid having either 0.5 mmol copper sulphate or ferrous ammonium sulphate or ferrous sulphate dissolved in it added to give a solid concentration of 15%. The reactor then heated to 160° C. with live steam injection. The contents held at that temperature for 10 min, after that the contents filtered under pressure.
The filtrate separated out into two layers, the aqueous layer was steam distilled and then the sugars dissolved analyzed. The solvent fraction was steam distilled and the lignin obtained as a residue. The residue remaining in the reactor analyzed for cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin. The results are given in table 1. As it is evident from the table that with the use of water soluble metal catalyst in the reaction media reduces the cellulose loss minimized to nearly 5% and significant amount of hemicellulose and lignin separated.
A 10% slurry of solid residues obtained as in experimental run of Example 1 saccharified with commercial cellulase enzyme preparation at 60 FPU/g of the enzyme loading. The contents incubated at 50° C. at a pH of 4.5 for a period of 24 hrs. After the incubation time, sugars analyzed to estimate the saccharification percentage. The saccharification results in Table 2 clearly indicate the susceptibility of the pretreated residue to the cellulase enzyme. It can be concluded that the obtained cellulose is amenable to complete saccharification within 24 hours. Cellulose obtained using any conventional process the saccharification time is several days.
The lignin obtained from the solvent fractions characterized by FTIR analysis. The results indicate the lignin obtained in the present process is comparable to pure lignin reported in literature (Table 3).
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2378/CHE/2006 | Jun 2007 | IN | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2008/001599 | 6/19/2008 | WO | 00 | 4/6/2010 |