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Large-scale Corn Fiber to Ethanol Process published on Bioresource Technology

  • Writer: Jie Dong
    Jie Dong
  • Sep 3, 2024
  • 1 min read

Aug. 10, 2024

The recent work at Dong's Lab about converting corn fiber/bran to biofuel was published on Bioresource Technology (IF 9.7) (https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2024.131216).

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Abstract

Fractionated corn bran was processed to maximize ethanol production from starch, cellulose, and xylan. After various bench-scale experiments, an optimized process with dilute acid pretreatment (1.5 % w/w H2SO4) at 90 ◦C for 60 min was utilized followed by enzymatic hydrolysis using cellulase and hemicellulase for 48 hr. After simultaneous saccharification (regarding starch) and fermentation at 150 L using an engineered yeast, which consumes both glucose and xylose to make ethanol, the 86 % total sugar conversion yield was achieved, including conversions of 95 % for starch, 77 % for cellulose and 77 % for xylan. Also, an accurate mass balance was formulated for ethanol-producing carbohydrates including starch, cellulose, and xylan from feedstock to final ethanol. A highly efficient process of converting corn fiber to ethanol was successfully scaled up to 150 L.

 
 
 

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Associate Professor

School of Chemical, Materials and Biomedical Engineering

110 Riverbend Road – Room 155F

Riverbend Research North

University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602

Email: Jie.Dong@uga.edu

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