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Cited 71 time in webofscience Cited 84 time in scopus
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Development of ultrasound aided chemical pretreatment methods to enrich saccharification of wheat waste biomass for polyhydroxybutyrate production and its characterization

Authors
Saratale, Ganesh DattatrayaSaratale, Rijuta GaneshVarjani, SunitaCho, Si-KyungGhodake, Gajanan S.Kadam, AvinashMulla, Sikandar, IBharagava, Ram NareshKim, Dong-SuShin, Han Seung
Issue Date
Aug-2020
Publisher
ELSEVIER
Keywords
Wheat waste biomass; Ultrasound pretreatment; Poly(3-hydroxybutyrate); Ralstonia eutropha (ATCC 17699); Biomass structure; Enzymatic hydrolysis
Citation
INDUSTRIAL CROPS AND PRODUCTS, v.150
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
INDUSTRIAL CROPS AND PRODUCTS
Volume
150
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/16955
DOI
10.1016/j.indcrop.2020.112425
ISSN
0926-6690
1872-633X
Abstract
Development of an effective pretreatment method is a vital stage to enhance biomass-based biopolymers production. The present study aims on the pretreatment of wheat waste biomass (WS) with alkaline and in combination with ultrasound (US) treatment to enhance enzymatic saccharification of WS into monomeric sugars. Effects of chemical dosage, substrate loading, US power and US pretreatment time on the pretreatment efficiency were systematically investigated. Under optimized conditions; US + NaOH pretreatment attained maximum 70% delignification of WS, with 84.5% hydrolysis yield, 90% glucose yield and 65% xylose yield after enzymatic hydrolysis (30 FPU/g of dry WS) which is substantially higher than the individual pretreatment. Analytical studies (XRD, FTIR, and SEM) revealed that the combined US + NaOH pretreatment can effectively destroyed the ultrastructure of biomass and improved the accessibility to hydrolyzing enzymes. The resulted enzymatic hydrolysates were utilized as a possible biomass feedstock for polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) production using Ralstonia eutropha. Effects of supplementation of nutrients, stressing agents and initial concentration of US + NaOH pretreated WS hydrolysates (20 to 40 g/L) on PHB production were evaluated. The maximum 74% PHA accumulation, PHB titer of 7.85 g/L and yield of PHB about 0.441 g/g of reducing sugar production was obtained. Analytical characterization and thermal characteristics of extracted biopolymer showed the poperies of standard PHB. The foregoing results suggested the potential of WS as an alternate renewable resource for sustainable biopolymer production and enables WS waste biomass disposal concerns.
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College of Life Science and Biotechnology > Department of Biological and Environmental Science > 1. Journal Articles
College of Life Science and Biotechnology > ETC > 1. Journal Articles
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