Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
677548 | Biomass and Bioenergy | 2012 | 5 Pages |
Softwood spruce (chips and milled), rice straw and triticale (a hybrid of rye and wheat) straw, were pretreated with N-methylmorpholine-N-oxide (NMMO or NMO) prior to anaerobic digestion to produce biogas. The pretreatments were performed at 130 °C for 1–15 h, and the digestions continued for six weeks. The digestions of untreated chips (10 mm) and milled (<1 mm) spruce, rice straw and triticale straw resulted in 11, 66, 22 and 30 Nml CH4/g raw material. However, the pretreatments have improved these methane yields by 400–1200%. The best digestion results of the pretreated chips and milled spruce, rice straw and triticale straw were 125, 245, 157 and 203 Nml CH4/g raw material (or 202, 395, 328 and 362 Nml CH4/g carbohydrates) respectively, which correspond to 49, 95, 79 and 87% of the theoretical yield of 415 Nml CH4/g carbohydrates. Although the experiments were carried out for six weeks, one and a half weeks was enough to digest the materials.
► Spruce, rice and triticale straw were treated with NMMO prior to anaerobic digestion. ► The pretreatments were performed at 130 °C for 1–15 h. ► The pretreatments have improved the methane yields by 400–1200%. ► This is due to the breakdown of the crystalline structure of the lignocelluloses.