2012 AIChE Annual Meeting
(406e) Chemical Pretreatment and Fermentation of Water Hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes) At Its Optimum Age
Authors
Alvin R. Caparanga - Presenter, Mapua Institute of Technology
Jan-Ray M. Oxales, School of Chemical Engineering and Chemistry
Water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes) is an aquatic plant that has been considered an environmental nuisance. But, this lignocellulosic biomass can be a good substrate for ethanol production. The average life-span of this plant is 25 days. In this study, we determined the age at which the plant’s holocelulose (cellulose + hemicelluloses) is highest and its lignin lowest. We found out that a 5-day old plant has the highest holocellulose-to-lignin ratio. We pretreated the 5-day-old plant samples with different chemicals (H2SO4, NaOH, H2O2) at 121 °C and 60 psia for 1 h to convert hollocellulose into fermentable sugars. We also followed the changes in lignin, glucan and xylan contents of the treated plant samples. The NaOH-treated samples had the highest level of delignification (63.32 %) and highest cellulose to glucose conversion (68.00 %). The H2SO4-treated samples had the highest xylan reduction (74.65 %) but lowest cellulose to glucose conversion (38.58 %). The H2O2-treated samples had the lowest delignification (30.43 %) although its cellulose to glucose conversion was 59.57 %. Using a traditional strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we fermented the hydrolyzed samples and produced 13.63 g ethanol per liter (0.16 g ethanol per g dry biomass) for the NaOH-treated sample, 8.13 g ethanol per liter (0.13 g ethanol per g dry biomass) for the H2SO4-treated sample, and 9.32 g ethanol per liter (0.14 g ethanol per g dry biomass). These yields are either better or near-equal to those reported for same biomass and other agricultural biomass.
See more of this Session: Biomass Characterization, Pretreatment and Fractionation
See more of this Group/Topical: 2012 International Congress on Energy (ICE)
See more of this Group/Topical: 2012 International Congress on Energy (ICE)