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Journal article

Alteration of biomass composition in response to changing substrate particle size and the consequences for enzymatic hydrolysis of corn bran

In Bioresources 2012, Volume 7, Issue 3, pp. 3378-3397
From

Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark1

Center for BioProcess Engineering, Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark2

Corn bran is a by-product from corn starch processing. This work examined the effects of changing substrate particle size on enzymatic hydrolysis of both raw and pretreated destarched corn bran. The biomass composition of the corn bran varied between particle size fractions: The largest particles ([1000;710]μm were richer in cellulose and in (arabino) xylan with a relatively low degree of arabinofuranosyl substitutions, whereas the smaller particles ([250;150]μm contained less cellulose, but arabinoxylan with higher arabinofuranosyl substitution (higher A:X ration).

Enzymatic hydrolysis yields improved with decreasing substrate particle size, particularly for the raw cron bran. The increased enzymatic yields obtained with decreasing substrate particle sizes were related to the increased substrate surface area but also to the biomass composition. Theoretical estimations of enzymatic reaction efficiency supported that biomass composition affected the enzymatic reaction yields and provided new insight into the impact of substrate particle size on enzymatic biomass hydrolysis.

Language: English
Publisher: North Carolina State University
Year: 2012
Pages: 3378-3397
ISSN: 19302126
Types: Journal article
ORCIDs: Agger, Jane and Meyer, Anne S.

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