Methyl Ketones from Municipal Solid Waste Blends by One-Pot Ionic-Liquid Pretreatment, Saccharification, and Fermentation

Jipeng Yan, Ling Liang, Qian He, Chenlin Li, Feng Xu, Jian Sun, Ee Been Goh, N. V.S.N.Murthy Konda, Harry R. Beller, Blake A. Simmons, Todd R. Pray, Vicki S. Thompson, Seema Singh, Ning Sun*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The conversion of municipal solid waste (MSW) and lignocellulosic biomass blends to methyl ketones (MKs) was investigated by using bioderived ionic liquid (bionic liquid)-based hydrolysates followed by fermentation with an engineered Escherichia coli strain. The hydrolysates were produced by a one-pot process using six types of MSW–biomass blends, choline-based bionic liquids, and commercial enzymes. Based on the sugar yields, one blend (corn stover/MSW=95:5, w/w) and two bionic liquids {cholinium lysinate ([Ch][Lys]) and cholinium aspartate ([Ch]2[Asp])} were selected for scale-up studies. Maximum yields of 82.3 % glucose and 54.4 % xylose were obtained from the selected blend in the scale-up studies (6 L), which was comparable with 83.6 % glucose and 52.8 % xylose obtained at a smaller scale (0.2 L). Comparable or higher yields of medium-chain (C11–C17) MKs were achieved by using the MSW–biomass blend-derived hydrolysates, relative to the sugar controls (glucose and xylose) with similar sugar feeding concentrations. Up to 1145 mg L−1 of MKs was produced by using MSW–biomass-derived hydrolysates, and the MK titer decreased to 300 mg L−1 when the bionic-liquid concentration in the hydrolysate increased from 1 to 2 %, indicative of bionic-liquid inhibition. Technoeconomic analysis was conducted to investigate the economic potential of using the selected MSW–biomass blend as a feedstock to produce MKs.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)4313-4322
Number of pages10
JournalChemSusChem
Volume12
Issue number18
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20 Sept 2019
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Escherichia coli
  • ionic liquids
  • methyl ketones
  • municipal solid waste
  • technoeconomic analysis

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