Delignification of corncob via combined hydrodynamic cavitation and enzymatic pretreatment: process optimization by response surface methodology

Abstract Background Renewable liquid biofuel production will reduce crude oil import of India. To displace the huge quantity of fossil fuels used for energy production, this research was focused on utilization of unexploited low-cost agricultural residues for biofuel production. Corncobs are a bypro...

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Main Authors: Kiruthika Thangavelu, Ramesh Desikan, Oxana P. Taran, Sivakumar Uthandi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-07-01
Series:Biotechnology for Biofuels
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13068-018-1204-y
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spelling doaj-9e1f2fd9451945229d906854483a0c3d2020-11-25T02:46:38ZengBMCBiotechnology for Biofuels1754-68342018-07-0111111310.1186/s13068-018-1204-yDelignification of corncob via combined hydrodynamic cavitation and enzymatic pretreatment: process optimization by response surface methodologyKiruthika Thangavelu0Ramesh Desikan1Oxana P. Taran2Sivakumar Uthandi3Department of Bioenergy, Agricultural Engineering College and Research Institute, Tamil Nadu Agricultural UniversityDepartment of Bioenergy, Agricultural Engineering College and Research Institute, Tamil Nadu Agricultural UniversityDepartment of Chemistry, Boreskov Institute of CatalysisBiocatalysts Lab, Department of Agricultural Microbiology, Tamil Nadu Agricultural UniversityAbstract Background Renewable liquid biofuel production will reduce crude oil import of India. To displace the huge quantity of fossil fuels used for energy production, this research was focused on utilization of unexploited low-cost agricultural residues for biofuel production. Corncobs are a byproduct of corn processing industry, and till now it is not utilized for biofuel production, eventhough it has high lignocellulosic concent. In this study, combined hydrodynamic cavitation and enzymatic (HCE) method was evaluated as a pretreatment method of corncob for biofuel production. The most significant process parameters namely (i) enzyme loading (3–10 U g−1), (ii) biomass loading (2.5–5.0%), and (iii) duration (5–60 min) were optimized and their effects on combined HCE pretreatment of corncob was studied through response surface methodology for lignin reduction, hemicellulose reduction and cellulose increase. Results The highest lignin reduction (47.4%) was obtained in orifice plate 1 (OP1) under the optimized conditions namely biomass loading at 5%, enzyme loading at 6.5 U g−1 of biomass, and reaction duration of 60 min. The above tested independent variables had a significant effect on lignin reduction. The cavitational yield and energy consumption under the above-mentioned optimized conditions for OP1 was 3.56 × 10−5 g J−1 and 1.35 MJ kg−1, respectively. Conclusions It is evident from the study that HCE is an effective technology and requires less energy (1.35 MJ kg−1) than other biomass pretreatment methods.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13068-018-1204-yCorncobPretreatmentDelignificationHydrodynamic cavitationLaccase enzyme
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kiruthika Thangavelu
Ramesh Desikan
Oxana P. Taran
Sivakumar Uthandi
spellingShingle Kiruthika Thangavelu
Ramesh Desikan
Oxana P. Taran
Sivakumar Uthandi
Delignification of corncob via combined hydrodynamic cavitation and enzymatic pretreatment: process optimization by response surface methodology
Biotechnology for Biofuels
Corncob
Pretreatment
Delignification
Hydrodynamic cavitation
Laccase enzyme
author_facet Kiruthika Thangavelu
Ramesh Desikan
Oxana P. Taran
Sivakumar Uthandi
author_sort Kiruthika Thangavelu
title Delignification of corncob via combined hydrodynamic cavitation and enzymatic pretreatment: process optimization by response surface methodology
title_short Delignification of corncob via combined hydrodynamic cavitation and enzymatic pretreatment: process optimization by response surface methodology
title_full Delignification of corncob via combined hydrodynamic cavitation and enzymatic pretreatment: process optimization by response surface methodology
title_fullStr Delignification of corncob via combined hydrodynamic cavitation and enzymatic pretreatment: process optimization by response surface methodology
title_full_unstemmed Delignification of corncob via combined hydrodynamic cavitation and enzymatic pretreatment: process optimization by response surface methodology
title_sort delignification of corncob via combined hydrodynamic cavitation and enzymatic pretreatment: process optimization by response surface methodology
publisher BMC
series Biotechnology for Biofuels
issn 1754-6834
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Abstract Background Renewable liquid biofuel production will reduce crude oil import of India. To displace the huge quantity of fossil fuels used for energy production, this research was focused on utilization of unexploited low-cost agricultural residues for biofuel production. Corncobs are a byproduct of corn processing industry, and till now it is not utilized for biofuel production, eventhough it has high lignocellulosic concent. In this study, combined hydrodynamic cavitation and enzymatic (HCE) method was evaluated as a pretreatment method of corncob for biofuel production. The most significant process parameters namely (i) enzyme loading (3–10 U g−1), (ii) biomass loading (2.5–5.0%), and (iii) duration (5–60 min) were optimized and their effects on combined HCE pretreatment of corncob was studied through response surface methodology for lignin reduction, hemicellulose reduction and cellulose increase. Results The highest lignin reduction (47.4%) was obtained in orifice plate 1 (OP1) under the optimized conditions namely biomass loading at 5%, enzyme loading at 6.5 U g−1 of biomass, and reaction duration of 60 min. The above tested independent variables had a significant effect on lignin reduction. The cavitational yield and energy consumption under the above-mentioned optimized conditions for OP1 was 3.56 × 10−5 g J−1 and 1.35 MJ kg−1, respectively. Conclusions It is evident from the study that HCE is an effective technology and requires less energy (1.35 MJ kg−1) than other biomass pretreatment methods.
topic Corncob
Pretreatment
Delignification
Hydrodynamic cavitation
Laccase enzyme
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13068-018-1204-y
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