articleBiotechnology for BiofuelsJun 8, 2009GOLD OA

Yield-determining factors in high-solids enzymatic hydrolysis of lignocellulose

Novozymes (Denmark) · University of Copenhagen · +1 more institution

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefdoajpubmed

Abstract

Background

Working at high solids (substrate) concentrations is advantageous in enzymatic conversion of lignocellulosic biomass as it increases product concentrations and plant productivity while lowering energy and water input. However, for a number of lignocellulosic substrates it has been shown that at increasing substrate concentration, the corresponding yield decreases in a fashion which can not be explained by current models and knowledge of enzyme-substrate interactions. This decrease in yield is undesirable as it offsets the advantages of working at high solids levels. The cause of the 'solids effect' has so far remained unknown.

Results

The decreasing conversion at increasing solids concentrations was found to be a generic or intrinsic effect, describing a linear correlation from 5 to 30% initial total solids content (w/w). Insufficient mixing has previously been shown not to be involved in the effect. Hydrolysis experiments with filter paper showed that neither lignin content nor hemicellulose-derived inhibitors appear to be responsible for the decrease in yields. Product inhibition by glucose and in particular cellobiose (and ethanol in simultaneous saccharification and fermentation) at the increased concentrations at high solids loading plays a role but could not completely account for the decreasing conversion. Adsorption of cellulases was found to decrease at increasing solids concentrations. There was a strong correlation between the decreasing adsorption and conversion, indicating that the inhibition of cellulase adsorption to cellulose is causing the decrease in yield.

Citation impact

644
total citations
FWCI
17.90
Percentile
100%
References
54
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Cellulase
  • Cellobiose
  • Chemistry
  • Cellulose
  • Hydrolysis
  • Enzymatic hydrolysis
  • Yield (engineering)
  • Adsorption
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