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Lignocellulose Conversion Enzymatic and Microbial Tools for Bioethanol Production

Title
Lignocellulose Conversion [electronic resource] : Enzymatic and Microbial Tools for Bioethanol Production / edited by Vincenza Faraco.
ISBN
9783642378614
Published
Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 2013.
Physical Description
X, 199 p. 8 illus., 4 illus. in color. digital.
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
Lignocellulose conversion stands out as a key process for the sustainable production of renewable fuels and chemicals. The use of lignocellulosic materials for second generation ethanol production makes it possible to minimize the conflict between land use for food (and feed) and energy production. The lignocellulosic raw materials are less expensive and they present a more even geographical distribution than does conventional agricultural feedstock. Residual biomass such as agro-industrial wastes, agricultural and forest crop residues and the organic and paper fractions of municipal solid waste make up a large percentage of lignocelluloses. Moreover, second generation ethanol production and use show lower greenhouse gas emissions than the first generation fuels, reducing environmental impacts, particularly in terms of climate change. Lignocellulose conversion into ethanol commonly involves a pretreatment to remove the barrier of lignin and expose plant cell wall polysaccharides, enzymatic saccharification of sugars with a cocktail of cellulolytic and hemicellulolytic enzymes, and fermentation of the sugars with ethanologenic microorganisms. The commercialization of the process to produce cellulosic ethanol is still limited due to the high costs of current technologies, above all the (hemi)cellulolytic enzymes required to hydrolyze the polysaccharides. The enzymatic hydrolysis may take place in a separate step followed by fermentation called separate hydrolysis and fermentation, or it may take place together with the fermentation in a simultaneous saccharification and fermentation of hexoses process or simultaneous saccharification and co-fermentation of both hexoses and pentoses. The ultimate objective is one-step consolidated bioprocessing of lignocellulose into bioethanol, in which all the steps take place in a single reactor where a single micro-organism or microbial consortium converts pre-treated biomass into ethanol. This book presents the main tools, the current technological developments and future prospects in cellulosic ethanol production and research.
Variant and related titles
Springer ebooks.
Other formats
Printed edition:
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
July 01, 2013
Contents
Introduction: Potential of Cellulosic Ethanol
Sources for Lignocellulosic Raw Materials for the Production of Ethanol
The Pretreatment Step in Lignocellulosic Biomass Conversion: Current Systems and New Biological Systems
The Saccharification Step: Trichoderma Reesei Cellulase Hyper Producer Strains.- The Saccharification Step: the Main Enzymatic Components
Extremophilic (Hemi)cellulolytic Microorganisms and Enzymes
The Alcohol Fermentation Step: the Most Common Ethanologenic Microorganisms Among Yeasts, Bacteria and Filamentous Fungi
Other Ethanologenic Microorganisms
Consolidated Bioprocessing for Improving Cellulosic Ethanol Production.
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