Biomass production
University of Georgia researchers have developed a new process to increase the yield of ethanol from readily available non-food crops.

University of Georgia researchers have developed a new process to increase the yield of ethanol from readily available non-food crops, such as bermudagrass, switchgrass and napiergrass.
Joy Peterson, professor of microbiology and chair of UGA’s Bioenergy Task Force, said: 'Producing ethanol from renewable biomass sources such as grasses is desirable because they are potentially available in large quantities. And optimising the breakdown of the plant fibres is critical to production of liquid transportation fuel via fermentation.'
Peterson developed the new process with former UGA microbiology student Sarah Kate Brandon, and Mark Eiteman, professor of biological and agricultural engineering.
It features a fast, mild, acid-free pretreatment process that increases by at least 10 times the amount of simple sugars released from inexpensive biomass for conversion to ethanol.
Currently, woody biomass requires soaking under high pressure and temperature in expensive, environmentally aggressive bases or acids before it is subjected to enzymes that digest it, producing simple sugars.
Register now to continue reading
Thanks for visiting The Engineer. You’ve now reached your monthly limit of news stories. Register for free to unlock unlimited access to all of our news coverage, as well as premium content including opinion, in-depth features and special reports.
Benefits of registering
-
In-depth insights and coverage of key emerging trends
-
Unrestricted access to special reports throughout the year
-
Daily technology news delivered straight to your inbox
Experts speculate over cause of Iberian power outages
The EU and UK will be moving towards using Grid Forming inverters with Energy Storage that has an inherent ability to act as a source of Infinite...