Assessment of the viability of Saccharomyces cerevisiae in response to synergetic inhibition during bioethanol production
Date
2018Author
De Klerk, Corli
Fosso-Kankeu, Elvis
Du Plessis, L.
Marx, S.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Second-generation biofuels, fuels produced from
lignocellulosic materials, including wood, agricultural
residues and biomass waste include bioethanol, biodiesel
and biogas. These fuel sources have great potential
as useful substitutes to conventional fossil fuels.
Biomass sources are also non-toxic and biodegradable
energy sources that can be produced from a wide
range of organic materials resulting in economic and
renewable energy source. Pretreatment of lingocellulosic
biomass is required to reduce physicochemical
restrictions that hinder the accessibility of
sugars necessary for hydrolysis and fermentation.
Various pretreatment processes exist, but all of them
produce inhibitory compounds that ultimately reduce
ethanol production and cell viability of the fermenting
microorganism, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In this
study different combinations of inhibitors (acetic acid,
formic acid and vanillin) were considered to mimic
realistic fermentation conditions during bioethanol
production; ethanol yield and cell viability were then
concurrently measured over a period of 48 h. The
combination of acetic acid and formic acid exhibited
ethanol reduction up to 11 ± 3.74%, while cell viability
decreased by 23 ± 6.61%. Acetic acid and vanillin reduced
ethanol production by 25 ± 1.77% and cell viability
by 4 ± 4.38%. Formic acid and vanillin inhibited
ethanol production by 31 ± 3.14% and cell viability
16 ± 7.54%. Finally, the synergistic effect of all three
inhibitors reduced the final ethanol production by
58 ± 5.09% and cell viability by 27 ± 5.44%, indicating
the toxic effect of the synergistic combination
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/31493https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Assessment-of-the-viability-of-Saccharomyces-in-to-Klerk-Fosso-Kankeu/308ff1c4d5440695808ce0c8c5945cc1f6b4be1f
Collections
- Faculty of Engineering [1136]
- Faculty of Health Sciences [2404]