UPM Institutional Repository

Lignocellulosic biofuel: a way forward


Citation

Abd. Aziz, Suraini (2014) Lignocellulosic biofuel: a way forward. [Inaugural Lecture]

Abstract

Economic dependency on fossil fuels and the resulting effects of its usage on the environment has placed considerable focus on utilizing biosugars from lignocellulosic biomass, the largest known renewable carbohydrate source as an alternative. Biosugars are derived from cellulose and hemicelluloses constituents; however these are in turn not readily accessible to enzymatic hydrolysis and hence requiring pretreatment, for extensive modification of the lignocellulosic structure. A number of pretreatment technologies are currently under development and tested at pilot scale. Hydrolysis of lignocellulose into biosugars requires a number of different cellulases and hemicellulases. The hydrolysis by cellulases is a sequential breakdown of the linear glucose chains, whereas hemicellulases must be capable of hydrolysing branched chains containing different sugars and functional groups. The technology for pretreatment and hydrolysis has been developed to an extent that is close to a commercially viable level. For example, processing of lignocelluloses at high substrate levels have become possible, all the while with improvements made on enzyme performances. In addition, the cost of enzymes has also been reduced. Nevertheless, a number of technical and scientific issues within pretreatment and hydrolysis remain to be solved and with significant expected improvements in yield and cost reductions, large-scale fermentation of lignocellulosic biomass is conceived to be possible. The concept of producing lignocellulosic biofuel, bioproducts and chemical through a biorefinery using lignocellulosic biomass had been around for 70 years or more. The use of renewable energy resources has become essential at a time when the focus is on global warming, carbon dioxide emission, security of energy supply, and reduction in consumption of fossil-based fuels. The recent interest in this biorefinery concept is based on the mitigation of climate change by substituting the biomass energy for petroleum or other fossil-fuel energy. Thus the realization of biorefinery concept remains a challenge.


Download File

[img]
Preview
PDF (Cover)
Cover.pdf

Download (1MB) | Preview
[img]
Preview
PDF (Fulltext)
Lignocellulosic.pdf

Download (4MB) | Preview

Additional Metadata

Item Type: Inaugural Lecture
Call Number: LG173 S45S981 no.189
Divisions: Faculty of Biotechnology and Biomolecular Sciences
Publisher: Universiti Putra Malaysia Press
Keywords: Lignocellulosic biomass; Biorefinery; Biomass energy
Depositing User: Azhar Abdul Rahman
Date Deposited: 22 Dec 2015 09:00
Last Modified: 22 Dec 2015 09:00
URI: http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/41611
Statistic Details: View Download Statistic

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item