INCREASE IN GLUCOSE GENERATION FROM THE BIOCONVERSION EFFICIENCY OF SUCCESSIVE PRETREATMENT OF DIFFERENT NIGERIAN SAWDUST LIGNOCELLULOSIC WASTES
Abstract
Biomass pretreatment plays an important role in lignocellulose utilization for glucose generation and subsequent bioconversion processes. The inherent properties of sawdust lignocellulosic biomass make them recalcitrant to enzymatic catalysis and thereby reduce its bioconversion efficiency. Effective pretreatment option enhances cellulose accessibility and susceptibility to enzymatic hydrolysis into glucose, biofuels and other desired chemicals. Investigation into the bioconversion efficiency of different sawdust lignocellulosic biosubstrates from a successive biomass pretreatment process and the resultant increase in glucose generation has been carried out. The amounts of glucose obtained from sawdust of twenty Nigerian tropical hardwoods at different biomass concentrations of 4, 10, 20, 40 and 60mg/mL after Kraft pretreatment process and Trichoderma viride cellulase interaction were 1.41, 2.29, 2.70, 2.46 and 1.96 mg/mL respectively for M. excelsa wood sawdust. The successive pretreatment of each of the Kraft cellulose with hydrogen peroxide at constant incubation period and enzyme treatment resulted in enhanced glucose concentrations of 3.26, 4.88, 4.65, 8.72 and 7.84mg/mL from the same M. excelsa sawdust to give 131%, 113%, 72%, 225% and 300% increase in glucose generation. The effect of a successive Kraft and hydrogen peroxide pretreatments on the biosubstrates led to large percentage increase in glucose formation from all the twenty-wood sawdust examined.