Second generation bioethanol production: A critical review

It is a popular fact that the world's dependency on fossil fuel has caused unfavourable effects, including lessening crude oil reserve, decreasing air quality, rising global temperature, unpredictable weather change, and so on. As the effort to promote sustainability and independency from fossi...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Aditiya, H.B., Mahlia, T.M.I., Chong, W.T., Nur, H., Sebayang, A.H.
Format: Article
Language:en_US
Published: 2017
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.uniten.dspace-6087
record_format dspace
spelling my.uniten.dspace-60872018-03-19T03:54:23Z Second generation bioethanol production: A critical review Aditiya, H.B. Mahlia, T.M.I. Chong, W.T. Nur, H. Sebayang, A.H. It is a popular fact that the world's dependency on fossil fuel has caused unfavourable effects, including lessening crude oil reserve, decreasing air quality, rising global temperature, unpredictable weather change, and so on. As the effort to promote sustainability and independency from fossil fuel, bioethanol is now favoured as the blend or fossil petrol substitute. However, the feedstock functionality of first generation bioethanol production is restricted due to its edibleness since it would clash the feeding purpose. Second generation bioethanol production fulfils the impractical gap of first generation since it employs non-edible feedstock sourced from agriculture and forestry wastes. Lignocellulosic and starchy materials in them are convertible to fermentable sugars that are able to be further processed, resulting anhydrous bioethanol as the end product. This paper critically reviews the existing variance of second generation bioethanol production methodologies, namely pre-treatment, hydrolysis, fermentation and distillation, as well as the worth of second generation production for future reference. The discussions in this paper are also fit as the fundamental for feasible planning of second generation bioethanol production plant. © 2016 2017-12-08T09:11:16Z 2017-12-08T09:11:16Z 2016 Article 10.1016/j.wasman.2015.07.031 en_US Second generation bioethanol potential from selected Malaysia's biodiversity biomasses: A review. Waste Management, 47, 46-61
institution Universiti Tenaga Nasional
building UNITEN Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Tenaga Nasional
content_source UNITEN Institutional Repository
url_provider http://dspace.uniten.edu.my/
language en_US
description It is a popular fact that the world's dependency on fossil fuel has caused unfavourable effects, including lessening crude oil reserve, decreasing air quality, rising global temperature, unpredictable weather change, and so on. As the effort to promote sustainability and independency from fossil fuel, bioethanol is now favoured as the blend or fossil petrol substitute. However, the feedstock functionality of first generation bioethanol production is restricted due to its edibleness since it would clash the feeding purpose. Second generation bioethanol production fulfils the impractical gap of first generation since it employs non-edible feedstock sourced from agriculture and forestry wastes. Lignocellulosic and starchy materials in them are convertible to fermentable sugars that are able to be further processed, resulting anhydrous bioethanol as the end product. This paper critically reviews the existing variance of second generation bioethanol production methodologies, namely pre-treatment, hydrolysis, fermentation and distillation, as well as the worth of second generation production for future reference. The discussions in this paper are also fit as the fundamental for feasible planning of second generation bioethanol production plant. © 2016
format Article
author Aditiya, H.B.
Mahlia, T.M.I.
Chong, W.T.
Nur, H.
Sebayang, A.H.
spellingShingle Aditiya, H.B.
Mahlia, T.M.I.
Chong, W.T.
Nur, H.
Sebayang, A.H.
Second generation bioethanol production: A critical review
author_facet Aditiya, H.B.
Mahlia, T.M.I.
Chong, W.T.
Nur, H.
Sebayang, A.H.
author_sort Aditiya, H.B.
title Second generation bioethanol production: A critical review
title_short Second generation bioethanol production: A critical review
title_full Second generation bioethanol production: A critical review
title_fullStr Second generation bioethanol production: A critical review
title_full_unstemmed Second generation bioethanol production: A critical review
title_sort second generation bioethanol production: a critical review
publishDate 2017
_version_ 1644493838838923264
score 13.214268