cellulase has been researched along with ammonium-sulfite* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for cellulase and ammonium-sulfite
Article | Year |
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Effect of Novel Pretreatment of Steam Explosion Associated with Ammonium Sulfite Process on Enzymatic Hydrolysis of Corn Straw.
Effective pretreatment process to improve enzymatic saccharification and decrease inhibitors generation is a key operation involved in the lignocellulosic bioconversion. The pretreatment of steam explosion associated with ammonium sulfite (SEAS) process was carried out to investigate the effect on enzymatic hydrolysis and fermentation production as a combinatorial pretreatment. Results showed that after pretreatment (1.0 MPa, 30 min, 20%w/w ammonium sulfite added), the phenolic inhibitors derived from lignin significantly removed (37.8%), which transformed to chemical humic acid (humic acid and fulvic acid) mostly. Sugar conversion (glucan (77.8%) and xylan (73.3%)) and ethanol concentration (40.8 g/L) of combinatorial pretreated samples were increased by 24.7% and 33.8%, respectively, compared with steam explosion (SE) pretreated samples. FT-IR and elemental analysis results indicated that the lignin structure changed and aromatization degree increased after SEAS pretreatment. In addition, the ratio of C/N decreased and compost maturity degree increased with the holding time. The effect on the growth of wheat seedlings of soluble fulvic acid solution from combinatorial pretreatment was investigated, where below 1% (w/w) concentration did contribute to growth. Therefore, one-step chemical pretreatment process could be provided for inhibitors removal, enzymatic saccharification increase, and chemical humic acid formation as well. Topics: Cellulase; Glucans; Hydrolysis; Quaternary Ammonium Compounds; Steam; Sulfites; Xylans; Zea mays | 2019 |
Continuous feeding of spent ammonium sulphite liquor improves the production and saccharification performance of cellulase by Penicillium oxalicum.
Spent ammonium sulphite liquor (SASL) is the main effluent from the ammonium sulphite pulping process, and contains amounts of lignocellulosic oligomers, monosaccharides and ammonium salts. The effect of continuous SASL-feeding on cellulase production by Penicillium oxalicum was studied. With a rate-varying feeding strategy, the maximal filter paper enzyme (FPase) activity reached 17.66U/mL at 144h, and the specific FPase activity increased from 1.74U/mg (without SASL) to 2.40U/mg. Accordingly, the glucan hydrolysis conversion of delignified corn cob residue by the enzymes from continuous SASL-feeding fermentation was significantly higher than that without SASL at equal protein loadings. Comparative proteomic analysis demonstrated that the proteins involved in lignocellulose degradation were specifically up-regulated in the crude cellulase with SASL-feeding. The obtained crude enzyme was efficient in the hydrolysis of pulping products, with a glucan conversion of 81.87% achieved after 72h saccharification of ammonium sulphite pulp. Topics: Cellulase; Fermentation; Hydrolysis; Penicillium; Proteomics; Quaternary Ammonium Compounds; Sulfites | 2017 |