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Hemicellulose:
Lignin Etherase from Microbe B603:Feasibility of
Isolation to Fractionate Wood for Chemicals--Tethys
Research, LLC, 53 Downing Road, Bangor, ME
04401; 207-942-9044; www.tethysresearch.com
Dr. Nancy Gail Kravit, Principal Investigator, ngkravit@tethysresearch.com
Dr. Nancy Gail Kravit, Business Official, ngkravit@tethysresearch.com
DOE Grant No. DE-FG02-07ER84788
Amount: $99,582
Forest biomass has the potential to provide
environmentally-sustainable, carbon-neutral raw material for much of the
nation’s energy and chemical synthesis needs.
However, the drawback to the use of wood for chemical production and biofuels continues to be the complexity of producing
separate streams of cellulose, hemicellulose, and/or lignin from the lignocellulosic
feedstock. The major difficulty in
fractionating wood is due to ether bonds between the lignin and hemicellulose components of wood. Current commercial wood fractionation
practices in the pulp and paper industry use primarily chemical means to break
these ether bonds. However, these
methods have many disadvantages: they
damage cellulose fibers; do not cleanly separate the constituent cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin; and pose serious environmental
challenges. Although several enzymes are known to be able to break down the
wood, they do so by generating free radicals, which also can break crosslinks between wood components, significantly reducing
product yield. Previous research led to
the discovery of three microorganisms that are potential sources of enzymes
that can specifically break the ether bonds.
Because these organisms also are likely to produce other enzymes that
break down hemicellulose and cellulose, this project
will isolate the etherase activity, leading to the
design of a pulping process in which the target enzyme can be used for wood
fractionation. In Phase I, the etherase activity will be isolated from one of these
microorganisms, the enzyme will be tested for its activity against lignin-hemicellulose complexes, and its identity will be
determined. Phase II will design and
test a pilot scale pretreatment process for pulping mills, which will increase
the efficiency of delignification of softwood and
generate feedstreams of lignin and hemicellulose.
Commercial
Applications and other Benefits as described by the awardee: The technology should have immediate applicability to the
producers of the more than 100 million tons of chemical pulp produced worldwide
annually. Currently, the production of a
softwood pulp with a kappa number of 30 provides a yield of about 40%. Since typical mills produce approximately
1000 tons of pulp per day, valued at about $450/ton, a 5% increase would
increase the gross revenue of a typical mill by $22,500 per day or
approximately $7,875,000 per annum. The
technology also has the
potential to reduce harmful land fragmentation and enable conservation efforts that
result in the protection of additional natural resources. Finally, the new technology would enable the
production of biofuels, thereby mitigating the rising
price of fuel and the volatility of the oil market.