Combination of bilogical and hydrothermal pretreatment of mixed rice biomass for fermentable sugar production
Abstract
Mixed rice biomass (combination of rice straw and rice husk) is one of the most staple
agricultural by-products in Malaysia. Generally for every 1 kg of paddy grain harvested about 1−1.5 kg of the rice straw and 200 g of the rice husk are obtained. In this study, mixed rice biomass which combines rice husk and rice straw in certain ratio, was used to synthesize fermentable sugars. The mixed rice biomass was physically pretreated
using grinder and it was being sieved. White-rot fungus strain Phanerochaete
chrysosporium was used for the biological pretreatment at 30 oC for 7 days. Lignin
content in lignocellulosic was removed during biological pretreatment. The
autohydrolysis pretreatment was used to remove hemicellulose. Reducing sugar content
of soluble mixed rice after autohydrolysis process was determined by 0.225 g sugar/g
sample. Characteristic of raw and solid pretreated mixed rice biomass had been
observed by Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) and functional groups were
determined by Fourier Transformed Infrared (FTIR). Based on the result, the
characterization analyses of the raw and pretreated sample illustrated significant
physical changes of the mixed rice biomass after biological and antohydrolysis
pretreatment. In order to maximize the production of fermentable sugar, two parameters
which are concentration of commercial cellulase enzyme used, Celluclast 1.5L and
incubation time were optimized using Response Surface Methodology (RSM). Based on
processed software, 13 runs with different condition were performed to observe the
condition for highest yield of reducing sugar. It was discovered that fermentable sugars
production was increased from 0.098 g sugar/g sample (0.125 g/L) to 0.248 g sugar/g
sample (0.319 g/L) at 81.94 hours incubation time and 10 FPU/g enzyme concentrations
in optimization on conditions of enzymatic saccharification. Hence, the total reducing
sugar produced was calculated as 0.473 g sugar/g sample and saccharification was
determined as 69.78%.