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Improved Conversion of
Cellulose Waste to Ethanol Using a Dual Bioreactor System--Technova Corporation, 3927 Dobie
Road, Okemos, MI 48864-3480; 517-485-1402; www.technovacorp.com
Dr. Serban
F. Peteu, Principal Investigator, serbanpeteu@aol.com
Ms. Farangis
Jamzadeh, Business Official, tchnv@aol.com
DOE Grant No. DE-FG02-07ER84872
Amount: $99,990
Wastes
from plant materials such as sawdust, wood chips, wood shavings, lawn grass,
and straw are natural resources that can be transformed into useful value-added
products. Wood waste and grass are major
sources of cellulose, the most abundant renewable natural resource. This project will develop a defined
consortium of natural microorganisms that will efficiently breakdown wood and
grass waste to energy-rich soluble sugars and convert them to cleaner-burning
ethanol fuel. By using whole microbial
cells for the saccharification process, a vast
spectrum of synergistic enzymes, required for complete degradation of lignocellulosic waste to fermentable sugars (such as
glucose and xylose), will be secreted. The proposed system will be cost-efficient,
simple, and highly usable by small-scale producers of fuel ethanol in local
communities, including agricultural farmers.
Phase I will: (1) develop a potent microbial inocula,
immobilized on solid inedible plant fiber waste; (2) validate a biocatalytic hybrid column reactor system for the
bioconversion of wood chips and grass waste; and (3) characterize and optimize
the entire bioprocess yield by analysis of the sugar composition of the
resulting plant fiber syrup. Phase II
will integrate the fermentation step and will maximize bioethanol
yield.
Commercial
Applications and other Benefits as described by the awardee: Efforts
to increase energy security and industrial cost-competitiveness, boost energy
efficiency, increase productivity, and prevent pollution will require that
traditional chemical feed stocks (petroleum and natural gas) be supplemented
with materials that are abundant in the United States. This technology will enable viable
alternative feedstock pathways to be developed for large-scale commodity
chemical production. The biofuel market hit $15.7 billion globally in 2005 and is
projected to grow by a factor of three 2015.