Illinois Data Bank

Data for "Evaluating the industrial potential of emerging biomass pretreatment technologies in bioethanol production and lipid recovery from transgenic sugarcane"

The selection of pretreatment methods is critical to achieving high product yields during bioconversion of lignocellulosic biomass. Hydrothermal, soaking-in-aqueous ammonia, and ionic liquid pretreatment methods are viable candidates for minimizing sugar decomposition, permitting the effective hydrolysis of structural carbohydrates, and producing a fermentable substrate suitable for achieving industrial ethanol titers and yields. In this study, the effect of these three pretreatment methods on non-modified sugarcane cultivar CP88-1762 and two transgenic lipid-accumulating sugarcane lines, oilcane 1565 and oilcane 1566, were investigated and compared in terms of lipid recovery, sugar yield, and ethanol yields within the lignocellulosic biomass conversion pipeline. Fed-batch enzymatic hydrolysis at high solid loading yielded hydrolysates capable of supporting industrial bioethanol titers across all conditions. The highest sugar yields were obtained on ammonia-pretreated biomass hydrolysate (253.73 g L−1), followed by hydrothermally pretreated hydrolysate (213.10 g L−1) and ionic liquid-pretreated hydrolysate (154.20 g L−1). Commercially viable ethanol titers of 100.62 g L−1, 64.47 g L−1, and 52.95 g L−1 were achieved from ammonia, hydrothermal, and ionic liquid pretreated hydrolysate with the corresponding ethanol productivities of 2.08 g L−1 h−1, 0.53 g L−1 h−1, and 0.36 g L−1 h−1. The lower acetic acid concentration in ammonia-pretreated hydrolysate may have enhanced its fermentability relative to the hydrothermal pretreatment condition, as indicated by the differences in ethanol titer and productivity. Lower sugar yields and ethanol productivities under the ionic liquid conditions likely resulted from the inhibitory effect of cholinium lysinate. Oilcane 1565 and oilcane 1566 bagasse accumulated over 16- and 3 times higher lipids than the non-modified sugarcane CP88-1762. The total fatty acid content in the oilcane samples was reduced in ammonia and ionic liquid-pretreated bagasse relative to the hydrothermal pretreatment condition. While all pretreatment techniques tested are industrially viable, the observed differences in titer, productivity, and lipid content indicate that careful selection and validation of upstream processing methods can contribute to improved economic and environmental outcomes.

Life Sciences
biomass analytics; energycane; feedstock bioprocessing; inter-BRC; lipids; oilcane; sugarcane
CC BY
U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)-Grant:DE-SC0018420
Vijay Singh
583 times
Version DOI Comment Publication Date
1 10.13012/B2IDB-7628238_V1 2025-10-03

11.3 KB File
430 Bytes File
428 Bytes File
431 Bytes File
546 Bytes File
571 Bytes File
571 Bytes File
574 Bytes File
572 Bytes File
568 Bytes File
633 Bytes File
643 Bytes File
644 Bytes File
891 Bytes File
853 Bytes File
889 Bytes File
996 Bytes File
993 Bytes File
1011 Bytes File
1.38 KB File
1.4 KB File
1.36 KB File
1.01 KB File
1.09 KB File
1.09 KB File
494 Bytes File
503 Bytes File
505 Bytes File
504 Bytes File
391 Bytes File
392 Bytes File
389 Bytes File
392 Bytes File
390 Bytes File
534 Bytes File
515 Bytes File
410 Bytes File
384 Bytes File
416 Bytes File

Contact the Research Data Service for help interpreting this log.

Research Data Service Illinois Data Bank
Access and Use Policies Web Privacy Notice Contact Us