Recent Developments in the Bioconversion of Lignocelluloses into Ethanol

Ethanol has been commercially produced using sugars derived from sugarcane and corn. Recently, research has been focused on the development of thermotolerant and ethanol-tolerant yeast or bacteria that are able to produce ethanol efficiently, as well as the development of lignocellulosic materials a...

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Main Authors: . KOESNANDAR, IS HELIANTI, NIKNIK NURHAYATI
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Indonesian Society for Microbiology 2010-08-01
Series:Microbiology Indonesia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jurnal.permi.or.id/index.php/mionline/article/view/70
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spelling doaj-e147c5edd770496ebb204ad5e96bd43f2021-08-31T13:00:33ZengIndonesian Society for MicrobiologyMicrobiology Indonesia1978-34772087-85752010-08-012310.5454/mi.2.3.166Recent Developments in the Bioconversion of Lignocelluloses into Ethanol. KOESNANDARIS HELIANTINIKNIK NURHAYATIEthanol has been commercially produced using sugars derived from sugarcane and corn. Recently, research has been focused on the development of thermotolerant and ethanol-tolerant yeast or bacteria that are able to produce ethanol efficiently, as well as the development of lignocellulosic materials as the carbon sources of fermentation. Utilization of lignocellulosic materials as fermentation substrate is promising since they are available in large amounts, renewable and relatively cheap. A lignocellulose biomass is a complex mixture of carbohydrate polymers. In order to develop an efficient process, there have been many attempts to obtain more efficient ways in the conversion of lignocelluloses to ethanol, including pretreatment, enzymatic hydrolysis of lignocelluloses and direct co-culture fermentation. This paper describes the production process of ethanol from starch-containing material, recent developments on the enzymatic bioconversion of lignocelluloses into sugars and their subsequent fermentation into ethanol and the possible recombination of microbes for the direct conversion of lignocelluloses into ethanol.https://jurnal.permi.or.id/index.php/mionline/article/view/70lignocellulosesethanolbioconversion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author . KOESNANDAR
IS HELIANTI
NIKNIK NURHAYATI
spellingShingle . KOESNANDAR
IS HELIANTI
NIKNIK NURHAYATI
Recent Developments in the Bioconversion of Lignocelluloses into Ethanol
Microbiology Indonesia
lignocelluloses
ethanol
bioconversion
author_facet . KOESNANDAR
IS HELIANTI
NIKNIK NURHAYATI
author_sort . KOESNANDAR
title Recent Developments in the Bioconversion of Lignocelluloses into Ethanol
title_short Recent Developments in the Bioconversion of Lignocelluloses into Ethanol
title_full Recent Developments in the Bioconversion of Lignocelluloses into Ethanol
title_fullStr Recent Developments in the Bioconversion of Lignocelluloses into Ethanol
title_full_unstemmed Recent Developments in the Bioconversion of Lignocelluloses into Ethanol
title_sort recent developments in the bioconversion of lignocelluloses into ethanol
publisher Indonesian Society for Microbiology
series Microbiology Indonesia
issn 1978-3477
2087-8575
publishDate 2010-08-01
description Ethanol has been commercially produced using sugars derived from sugarcane and corn. Recently, research has been focused on the development of thermotolerant and ethanol-tolerant yeast or bacteria that are able to produce ethanol efficiently, as well as the development of lignocellulosic materials as the carbon sources of fermentation. Utilization of lignocellulosic materials as fermentation substrate is promising since they are available in large amounts, renewable and relatively cheap. A lignocellulose biomass is a complex mixture of carbohydrate polymers. In order to develop an efficient process, there have been many attempts to obtain more efficient ways in the conversion of lignocelluloses to ethanol, including pretreatment, enzymatic hydrolysis of lignocelluloses and direct co-culture fermentation. This paper describes the production process of ethanol from starch-containing material, recent developments on the enzymatic bioconversion of lignocelluloses into sugars and their subsequent fermentation into ethanol and the possible recombination of microbes for the direct conversion of lignocelluloses into ethanol.
topic lignocelluloses
ethanol
bioconversion
url https://jurnal.permi.or.id/index.php/mionline/article/view/70
work_keys_str_mv AT koesnandar recentdevelopmentsinthebioconversionoflignocellulosesintoethanol
AT ishelianti recentdevelopmentsinthebioconversionoflignocellulosesintoethanol
AT nikniknurhayati recentdevelopmentsinthebioconversionoflignocellulosesintoethanol
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