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How does genetic modification impact the fractionation, depolymer | 53159
Journal of Fundamentals of Renewable Energy and Applications

Journal of Fundamentals of Renewable Energy and Applications
Open Access

ISSN: 2090-4541

+44 1300 500008

How does genetic modification impact the fractionation, depolymerization and catalytic upgrading of lignin from engineered plants?


World Bioenergy Congress and Expo

June 13-14, 2016 Rome, Italy

Jian Shi

University of Kentucky Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering, USA

Posters & Accepted Abstracts: J Fundam Renewable Energy Appl

Abstract :

Developing biomass feedstocks with desirable traits for cost effective conversion is one of the main focus areas in biofuels research. Pretreatment is a crucial step for making biomass feedstocks more amenable to biological conversion by unlocking sugars for fermentation. Nevertheless, as suggested by techno-economic analyses, the success of a lignocellulosebased biorefinery largely relies on the utilization of lignin to generate value-added products, i.e., fuels and chemicals. The fate of lignin and its structural/compositional changes during pretreatment have received increasing attention of late; however, the effect of genetic modification on the fractionation, depolymerization and catalytic upgrading of lignin from engineered plants is not well understood. This study aims to fractionate and characterize the lignin streams from wild-type and engineered switchgrass species (with low/high lignin content and high S or G lignin content) using three different pretreatment methods, i.e. dilute acid, ammonia hydroxide, and ionic liquid (cholinium lysinate). The molecular weight of the lignin fractions recovered from the liquid and solids streams after pretreatment and enzymatic hydrolysis was determined by gel permeation chromatography (GPC), while the cleavage of inter-unit lignin linkages was tracked by H1C13 HSQC NMR, results being compared with lignin in untreated switchgrass. Analytical-scale pyrolysis of lignin streams was carried out in a pyrolysis-GC/ MS instrument to characterize the lignin pyrolysates and provide information about lignin structure and composition. Results from this study provide a better understanding of how lignin engineering of switchgrass influences lignin fractionation and upgrading during conversion processes based on different pretreatment technologies.

Biography :

Email: j.shi@uky.edu

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