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Journal ArticleDOI

Fermentation kinetics of ethanol production from glucose and xylose by recombinant Saccharomyces 1400(pLNH33)

TLDR
Kinetic studies were used to develop a fermentation model incorporating the effects of substrate inhibition, product inhibition, and inoculum size and good agreements were obtained between model predictions and experimental data from batch fermentation of glucose, xylose, and their mixtures.
Abstract
Fermentation kinetics of ethanol production from glucose, xylose, and their mixtures using a recombinant Saccharomyces 1400(pLNH33) are reported. Single-substrate kinetics indicate that the specific growth rate of the yeast and the specific ethanol productivity on glucose as the substrate was greater than on xylose as a substrate. Ethanol yields from glucose and xylose fermentation were typically 95 and 80% of the theoretical yield, respectively. The effect of ethanol inhibition is more pronounced for xylose fermentation than for glucose fermentation. Studies on glucose-xylose mixtures indicate that the recombinant yeast co-ferments glucose and xylose. Fermentation of a 52.8 g/L glucose and 56.3 g/L xylose mixture gave an ethanol concentration of 47.9 g/L after 36 h. Based on a theoretical yield of 0.51 g ethanol/g sugars, the ethanol yield from this experiment (for data up to 24 h) was calculated to be 0.46 g ethanol/g sugar or 90% of the theoretical yield. The specific growth rate of the yeast on glucose-xylose mixtures was found to lie between the specific growth rate on glucose and the specific growth rate on xylose. Kinetic studies were used to develop a fermentation model incorporating the effects of substrate inhibition, product inhibition, and inoculum size. Good agreements were obtained between model predictions and experimental data from batch fermentation of glucose, xylose, and their mixtures.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Fuel ethanol production: process design trends and integration opportunities.

TL;DR: The key role that process design plays during the development of cost-effective technologies is recognized through the analysis of major trends in process synthesis, modeling, simulation and optimization related to ethanol production.
Journal ArticleDOI

Metabolic engineering for improved fermentation of pentoses by yeasts

TL;DR: Researchers have engineered xylose metabolism in S. cerevisiae, showing that adapted strains of Pichia stipitis have been shown to ferment hydrolysates with ethanol yields of 0.45 g g−1 sugar consumed, so commercialization seems feasible for some applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolutionary engineering of mixed-sugar utilization by a xylose-fermenting Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain

TL;DR: It is concluded that the kinetics of xylose fermentation are no longer a bottleneck in the industrial production of bioethanol with yeast.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rethinking biological activation of methane and conversion to liquid fuels

TL;DR: A vision for a new foundation for methane bioconversion is formulated and paths to develop technologies for the production of liquid transportation fuels from methane at high carbon yield and high energy efficiency and with low CO2 emissions are suggested.
Book Chapter

Hydrolysis of Cellulose and Hemicellulose

TL;DR: A comprehensive overview of the technology and economic status for cellulose and hemicellulose hydrolysis, including a description of important structural features of cellulosic materials, applications, process steps, and stoichiometry for the reactions can be found in this paper.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Fuel ethanol from cellulosic biomass.

TL;DR: Ethanol produced from cellulosic biomass is examined as a large-scale transportation fuel and a cost-competitive process appears possible in a decade, with conversion economics the key obstacle to be overcome.
Journal ArticleDOI

Metabolic engineering of a pentose metabolism pathway in ethanologenic Zymomonas mobilis

TL;DR: This strain efficiently fermented both glucose and xylose, which is essential for economical conversion of lignocellulosic biomass to ethanol, and achieved through a combination of the pentose phosphate and Entner-Doudoroff pathways.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetically Engineered Saccharomyces Yeast Capable of Effective Cofermentation of Glucose and Xylose

TL;DR: Rec recombinant plasmids are developed that can transform Saccharomyces spp.
Journal Article

Patent pending

Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic improvement of Escherichia coli for ethanol production: chromosomal integration of Zymomonas mobilis genes encoding pyruvate decarboxylase and alcohol dehydrogenase II.

TL;DR: These mutants were functionally equivalent to the previous plasmid-based strains for the fermentation of xylose and glucose to ethanol and exceeded theoretical limits on the basis of added sugars because of the additional production of ethanol from the catabolism of complex nutrients.
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