Xylitol Production From Byproducts Generated During Sequential Acid-/Alkali-Pretreatment of Empty Palm Fruit Bunch Fiber by an Adapted Candida tropicalis

Xylose is a pentose sugar with the potential to convert a variety of valuable chemical products. In this study, acidic pretreatment wastewater generated during a sequential acid-/alkali-pretreatment process was recycled to increase the hydrolyzed hemicellulose fraction from empty palm fruit bunch fi...

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Main Author: Seonghun Kim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Energy Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenrg.2019.00072/full
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spelling doaj-7f708fedd7924e76b378821c5ceeb3152020-11-25T01:26:23ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Energy Research2296-598X2019-07-01710.3389/fenrg.2019.00072464050Xylitol Production From Byproducts Generated During Sequential Acid-/Alkali-Pretreatment of Empty Palm Fruit Bunch Fiber by an Adapted Candida tropicalisSeonghun Kim0Seonghun Kim1Jeonbuk Branch Institute, Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology (KRIBB), Jeongeup, South KoreaDepartment of Biosystems and Bioengineering, KRIBB School of Biotechnology, University of Science and Technology (UST), Daejeon, South KoreaXylose is a pentose sugar with the potential to convert a variety of valuable chemical products. In this study, acidic pretreatment wastewater generated during a sequential acid-/alkali-pretreatment process was recycled to increase the hydrolyzed hemicellulose fraction from empty palm fruit bunch fiber (EPFBF), a lignocellulosic biomass. The xylose in the reused wastewater was subjected to overliming and an activated charcoal column was used to remove inhibitory compounds, for xylitol fermentation using the adapted C. tropicalis strain. The cell growth and xylose uptake rates in the adapted strain were 1.7- and 5-fold higher, respectively, compared to the wild-type strain. During batch fermentation using the adapted yeast strain and the post-pretreated xylose solution, 35.2 ± 0.8 g/L xylitol was obtained within 61 h for a production yield of 0.44 g xylitol/g xylose. These results indicate that xylose in the byproducts produced in the bioethanol process could be recovered for production of xylitol.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenrg.2019.00072/fullacidic pretreated biomass wastewatersequential acid-/alkali-pretreatment processxylosexylitoladapted C. tropicalisoverliming
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Seonghun Kim
Seonghun Kim
spellingShingle Seonghun Kim
Seonghun Kim
Xylitol Production From Byproducts Generated During Sequential Acid-/Alkali-Pretreatment of Empty Palm Fruit Bunch Fiber by an Adapted Candida tropicalis
Frontiers in Energy Research
acidic pretreated biomass wastewater
sequential acid-/alkali-pretreatment process
xylose
xylitol
adapted C. tropicalis
overliming
author_facet Seonghun Kim
Seonghun Kim
author_sort Seonghun Kim
title Xylitol Production From Byproducts Generated During Sequential Acid-/Alkali-Pretreatment of Empty Palm Fruit Bunch Fiber by an Adapted Candida tropicalis
title_short Xylitol Production From Byproducts Generated During Sequential Acid-/Alkali-Pretreatment of Empty Palm Fruit Bunch Fiber by an Adapted Candida tropicalis
title_full Xylitol Production From Byproducts Generated During Sequential Acid-/Alkali-Pretreatment of Empty Palm Fruit Bunch Fiber by an Adapted Candida tropicalis
title_fullStr Xylitol Production From Byproducts Generated During Sequential Acid-/Alkali-Pretreatment of Empty Palm Fruit Bunch Fiber by an Adapted Candida tropicalis
title_full_unstemmed Xylitol Production From Byproducts Generated During Sequential Acid-/Alkali-Pretreatment of Empty Palm Fruit Bunch Fiber by an Adapted Candida tropicalis
title_sort xylitol production from byproducts generated during sequential acid-/alkali-pretreatment of empty palm fruit bunch fiber by an adapted candida tropicalis
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Energy Research
issn 2296-598X
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Xylose is a pentose sugar with the potential to convert a variety of valuable chemical products. In this study, acidic pretreatment wastewater generated during a sequential acid-/alkali-pretreatment process was recycled to increase the hydrolyzed hemicellulose fraction from empty palm fruit bunch fiber (EPFBF), a lignocellulosic biomass. The xylose in the reused wastewater was subjected to overliming and an activated charcoal column was used to remove inhibitory compounds, for xylitol fermentation using the adapted C. tropicalis strain. The cell growth and xylose uptake rates in the adapted strain were 1.7- and 5-fold higher, respectively, compared to the wild-type strain. During batch fermentation using the adapted yeast strain and the post-pretreated xylose solution, 35.2 ± 0.8 g/L xylitol was obtained within 61 h for a production yield of 0.44 g xylitol/g xylose. These results indicate that xylose in the byproducts produced in the bioethanol process could be recovered for production of xylitol.
topic acidic pretreated biomass wastewater
sequential acid-/alkali-pretreatment process
xylose
xylitol
adapted C. tropicalis
overliming
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenrg.2019.00072/full
work_keys_str_mv AT seonghunkim xylitolproductionfrombyproductsgeneratedduringsequentialacidalkalipretreatmentofemptypalmfruitbunchfiberbyanadaptedcandidatropicalis
AT seonghunkim xylitolproductionfrombyproductsgeneratedduringsequentialacidalkalipretreatmentofemptypalmfruitbunchfiberbyanadaptedcandidatropicalis
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