Abstract
Growing interest in lignocellulosic bioethanol stems from the European Union's renewable energy directive, targeting a global bioethanol output of 130 billion L to achieve a minimum threshold of 42.5%. Despite industrialization challenges, recent advancements, especially in crucial stages like pretreatment, hydrolysis, and fermentation, are transforming the landscape. This review delves into the progress of bioethanol production, addressing technological, environmental, and economic hurdles. Innovations such as deep eutectic solvent pretreatment and mechanocatalysis, offering advantages like 30% and 100% solid loading, respectively, surpass traditional techniques and enzymatic hydrolysis in yielding better results. Improved pretreatment methods, enzyme exploration, saccharification techniques, genetic engineering, and integrated biorefineries contribute to overall economic viability. Ongoing research involves techno-economic analysis for cost-effective strategies, aiming to enhance the competitiveness of lignocellulosic bioethanol production. Scrutinizing the feasibility of these innovative approaches not only highlights their potential to overcome existing shortcomings but also envisions a more attractive future for industrial bioethanol production. Embracing these advancements could pave the way for a vibrant and sustainable bioethanol industry.
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1 Introduction
Global warming, driven by increased greenhouse gas emissions from fossil energy sources, has prompted research into renewable and carbon–neutral alternatives like lignocellulosic biomass (LCB). This change is needed to respect the global warming limits determined in the Paris COP 21 agreement (Delmas et al., 2022). LCB is a versatile resource for sustainable biofuels, including biogas, biodiesel, and bioethanol. These biofuels contribute minimally to greenhouse gas emissions and foster agricultural development (Sondhi et al., 2020). Bioethanol, derived from the hydrolysis and fermentation of LCB like agricultural and forestry residues, holds significance as a biofuel and a precursor for hydrogen production, serving as a versatile energy source.
Currently, industrial bioethanol production relies on first-generation (1G) feedstocks like corn, sugarcane and wheat. In 2022, the United States, as a major producer, generated 58.1 × 106 m3 of bioethanol; Brazil and the European Union produced 28.4 and 5.5 × 106 m3, respectively (Sönnichsen, 2024). In the EU, 7% of the total cereal harvest (12.2 million metric tons) was required to produce 5.5 × 106 m3 of bioethanol in 2019 (Flach et al., 2019). Typically, the cost of the 1G feedstock accounts for 40 to 70% of the total cost of the production of ethanol (Calderon & Arantes, 2019). For instance, the cost of corn and sugarcane were $186/ton and $61/ton while the prices for corn stover and sugarcane bagasse were estimated as $59/ton and $36/ton (Calderon & Arantes, 2019). The debate over food security versus energy prompted the need to replace 1G feedstocks with second-generation (2G) alternatives, which are cheaper and abundant. 2G feedstocks include agricultural residues, forestry residues, and organic fractions.
Unlike 1G, 2G feedstocks have complex structures requiring intensive pretreatment, increasing production costs (Silva Ortiz et al., 2020; Vasconcelos et al., 2020). For instance the minimum selling price for corn stover sourced sugar was estimated at $587/ton which was about 2 times the reported price of sugar, $283/ton (Calderon & Arantes, 2019). This limited the industrial development of bioethanol production from 2G feedstocks to ca. 50 × 103 m3 in 2019 (Flach et al., 2019). Despite cost challenges, 2G feedstocks offer advantages in CO2 emissions and energy efficiency (Silva Ortiz et al., 2020). Wood and agricultural residues are considered the most economically and environmentally competitive 2G feedstocks among lignocellulosic biomass, owing to their advantage to high hemicellulose content and optimal lignin levels for energy efficiency. The minimum selling price for alder wood, pine wood, wheat straw and corn stover sourced bioethanol were $2.07, $2.13, $2.05 and $2.17/US gal while elephant grass and guinea grass were $2.45 and $2.54/US gal (Sadhukhan et al., 2019).
The 2G feedstocks are formed by three natural polymers, cellulose (30–60%), hemicellulose (20–40%) and lignin (15–25%), which constitute lignocellulosic biomass (LCB, Fig. 1). Theoretically, from one ton each of glucan from cellulose and xylan from hemicellulose, 651.1 L and 666.2 L of bioethanol could be produced through fermentation, respectively (Calderon & Arantes, 2019). Lignin acts as a shield against both chemical and biological attacks of the cellulose and hemicellulose portions. Pretreatments to remove lignin from LCB and make cellulose and hemicellulose fermentable are an essential part of the process to obtain bioethanol from 2G feedstocks. Chemicals such as acids, alkalis, organic solvents, oxidising agents, ionic liquids and deep eutectic solvents have been used for this purpose. However, pretreatment can increase the cost of bioethanol up to an additional 40%. Major issues when designing a pretreatment process are the generation of chemical waste and the requirements of primary energy per unit mass of processed biomass. Current recognition of green and clean processes makes it paramount to consider the pretreatment not only from the aspect of cost but also by its environmental friendliness, recyclability of chemicals and overall minimization of the environmental impact.
Hydrolysis of the cellulose-rich pretreated substrates and fermentation of the glucose formed are the subsequent stages of the bioethanol production process. These two steps can either be performed consecutively through separate hydrolysis and fermentation (SHF), or by simultaneous hydrolysis and fermentation (SSF). The effectiveness and the cost of the enzymes and yeasts used in these steps are of significant concern in bioethanol production. For instance, even at a low cellulase dosage of 20 mg cellulase/g glucan, the cost of the enzyme amounts to 15.7% of the cost of the bioethanol produced from LCB (Chen et al., 2021a, 2021b). Although hydrolysis can lead to high yields of monosaccharides (glucose and xylose), Saccharomyces cerevisiae (S. cerevisiae), the yeast strain most commonly used is only effective in fermenting glucose while xylose is not converted to bioethanol. Since most of the enzymes and yeasts that are used are commercial strains, research to improve efficiency and reduce process cost has focused on the optimisation of the pretreatment strategy, process integration, yeast recycling, and in obtaining yeast strains capable of fermenting xylose (Bibi et al., 2023).
A study of the industrial status of 2G lignocellulose bioethanol plants around the world showed that although a lot of companies were constructed in the U.S, Germany, China, Brazil and Italy among others, the cost of bioethanol production with 2G biomass far exceeded that with 1G biomass resulting in most of them shutting down (Wang et al., 2022). The few companies that have survived until now have mainly being due to innovations in the field of pretreatment, hydrolysis or fermentation.
The present Renewable Energy Directive of the European Union (EU/2023/2413) aims to attain a minimum renewable energy threshold of 42.5%, aspiring to elevate it to 45% by the year 2030 (European Commission, 2024) This signifies nearly doubling the present proportion of renewable energy within the EU. Furthermore, with 85% of Europeans believing that EU should make substantial investments in renewable energy there is bound to be a rise in investments. This signifies that despite the cost involved in bioethanol production from 2G biomass, the process could see a boost in investment. Furthermore, bioethanol cost is directly linked to the ethanol concentration and yield meaning that lignocellulose bioethanol can become sustainable when the ethanol concentration exceeds 40 g/L (Chen & Fu, 2016). Bioethanol production from 2G lignocellulosic biomass can become more feasible with a reduced total cost in the forthcoming future by improving the pretreatment process, saccharification performance, enzyme price and fermentation efficiency (Carvalho & Ishikawa, 2019). There is therefore a need to take a second look at the bioethanol production technological process and determined its shortfalls, as well as means to remedy it to make it industrially and economically feasible.
To this end, this article reviews and summarizes the current challenges in the production of bioethanol from 2G lignocellulose biomass, focusing on pretreatment, hydrolysis and fermentation stages. Current strategies to address those challenges and their implication on current ethanol production and techno-economic are highlighted and future trends in process configurations are discussed. It is envisioned that effectively incorporating these strategies would further empower and promote the use of industrial production of bioethanol from LCB.
2 Challenges in the bioethanol production process
2.1 Pretreatment
Pretreatment techniques are classified as chemical, physico-chemical, physical or biological. Each type of pretreatment has its own merits and demerits (Table 1). An efficient pretreatment technique reduces the lignin content thereby preventing enzyme attachment to lignin during hydrolysis improving saccharification efficiency (Preethi et al., 2021). The individual pretreatment techniques have been extensively reviewed in literature (Gandam et al., 2022). Physical pretreatments focus on particle size reduction to increase surface area, reduce cellulose crystallinity and improve the accessibility to enzymes and microorganisms (Maroušek et al., 2012; Sitotaw et al., 2023). They have a high energy requirement, but do not form inhibitors and have a minimal effect on the removal of lignin and hemicellulose. Chemical pretreatments require less time than biological treatment and less energy than physical treatments (Li et al., 2022; Maroušek, 2013). They cause changes on the lignocellulosic structure that remove lignin or/and hemicellulose partially and develop porosity and accessibility to the cellulose fibres, but they generate inhibitors and produce chemical waste that requires of treatment and disposal (Ceaser & Chimphango, 2021). Physico-chemical pretreatments combine characteristics of the physical and the chemical treatments and inherit both their positive and negative qualities. Biological pretreatments are environmentally friendly, selective and do not form inhibitors of the fermentation microorganisms but require costly nutrients for microbes and extensive pretreatment time.
The particular advantages of different pretreatments have led to their integration into sequential or combined pretreatment techniques that enhance delignification efficiency but require less time and energy, and reduce the losses of sugars, the formation of inhibitors, the generation of waste, and ethanol cost. Combining fungi treatment with steam explosion (SE) reduced the time required in the biological pretreatment from 60 to 35 days (Taniguchi et al., 2010). A sequential combination of dilute acid pretreatment (DAP) and SE removed 75% xylose, 18% glucose and 22% lignin from olive stones but formed acetic acid and furfural from xylan as the main fermentation inhibitors (Padilla-Rascón et al., 2020). Interestingly, bacteria-enhanced DAP did not significantly affect the biomass composition as opposed to a simple DAP, however it improved biomass digestibility by 70% in comparison with a solo DAP (Yan et al., 2017). The authors showed that the bacteria attached itself to the lignin droplets formed on the biomass during pretreatment thereby not causing a decrease in lignin content. Nevertheless, this action of the bacteria promoted the porosity of the lignocellulose matrix while preventing lignin from hindering saccharification, thus improving the digestibility and the yield of glucose at similar biomass compositions.
Microwave pretreatment is another method that over the past decade has gained much interest, especially when used in combination with other pretreatments (Ocreto et al., 2021). The microwave irradiation increases the rate of chemical reactions, reducing treatment time whereas causing an explosion effect within the biomass structure thereby improving pretreatment efficiency (Table 1) (Amesho et al., 2022; Kumari & Singh, 2018). Microwave pretreatment was reported to perform better in improving biomass composition and sugar yields than both autoclave and hot plate heating (Gabhane et al., 2011; Shangdiar et al., 2023). Water, acids and alkalis are some of the chemicals that have been used in microwave pretreatment. Microwave-assisted water pretreatment was reported as an efficient method for obtaining polymeric and oligomeric xylan yields (51–66%) from biomass while efficiently increasing content and digestibility (74–78%) of cellulose (Mihiretu et al., 2017). Similarly, 38% hemicellulose and 74% cellulose were retained while 69% lignin was removed from wheat straw using microwave assisted NaOH pretreatment. This increased the saccharification efficiency by 79% while reducing the time taken to reach the highest saccharification efficiency from 12 to 8 days in comparison with untreated wheat straw (Tsegaye et al., 2019). Unlike the low inhibitor production when water and NaOH are used as the chemicals, the use of H2SO4 in a microwave-assisted pretreatment of maize distillery stillage was reported to produce enough inhibitors that detoxification was required before undergoing fermentation (Mikulski et al., 2019).
The major inhibitors produced during the pretreatment process are furfural, 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF), phenols, and carboxylic acids such as acetic acid. The inhibitors produced depend on the pretreatment technique, the chemicals used and their toxicity, the pretreatment conditions and also the composition of biomass itself (Preethi et al., 2021). In acidic pretreatments, furfural, HMF, phenols and carboxylic acids are formed as inhibitors while in alkaline pretreatments phenols, carboxylic and acetic acids are formed (Beig et al., 2020). In SE, the partial removal of lignin and hemicellulose and the formation of inhibitors such as furfural and HMF makes it easier for the inhibitors to penetrate the biomass cell wall affecting enzymatic and microbial activities (Simangunsong et al., 2020). In hydrothermal or liquid hot water pretreatments, the elevated water temperature also causes the formation of furfural from the extracted hemicellulose (Paul & Dutta, 2018). Excessive delignification results in lignin depolymerisation into acids that can also serve as a source of inhibition (Alvira et al., 2010). Silica present in biomasses such as rice husks can also act as an inhibitor to cellulolytic enzymes after scaling mechanical equipment (Satlewal et al., 2018; Talukder et al., 2017).
Cost is a major consideration in the feasibility of industrialising any conversion process. Pretreatment alone can make up from 11 to 27% of the total cost of bioethanol production (Su et al., 2020). Energy and chemicals are the major contributors to the cost of pretreatment. A study conducted on a fermentable sugar production process by (Baral & Shah, 2017) showed that a biological pretreatment was over three times more expensive than DAP or SE, although it required 12-fold less energy due to the lower temperature required. This was due to a twofold increase in the required amount of feedstock and the much larger reactor volume that was needed due to the long pretreatment time (23 days) to achieve similar yields of fermentable sugars. A techno-economic analysis conducted on a 2000 t/day bioethanol production process showed that pretreatment cost was higher in DAP ($25.0 million (MM)) and alkaline ($23.0 MM) than in hot water ($4.5 MM), while the total capital cost was the lowest in alkaline pretreatment ($163.6 MM) than in DAP ($208.6 MM) and autohydrolysis ($200.9 MM) (Eggeman & Elander, 2005). Tao et al. (2013) assessed sugar production through various pretreatment techniques and the cost involved. DAP, alkaline, autohydrolysis and SO2-SE gave sugar yields of 398, 427, 315 and 459 million kg/year for 2000 tons of biomass processed per day; however, the installed equipment cost for pretreatment increased in the order autohydrolysis pretreatment ($10 MM) < DAP ($23 MM) < SO2 SE ($33 MM) < alkaline pretreatment ($86 MM). Alkaline pretreatment had the highest equipment cost because it was the only process that included a recycling step. Although the cost of the alkaline pretreatment reactor was lower than that of the more complex reactors needed for DAP and SO2 SE, the longer residence time and number of reactors required contributed to the higher investment. The inclusion of a detoxification unit for treatments such as DAP and SO2 SE could have further increased the final cost (Baral & Shah, 2017; Preethi et al., 2021).
In chemical pretreatment, the chemical requirements cost is normally high due to the inclusion of other expenses such as chemical storage and chemical transportation cost (Paudel et al., 2017). However, this expenditure can be offset by achieving high product yields (Preethi et al., 2021). Dilute acid pretreatment was reported to yield 0.27 t bioethanol/t biomass while liquid hot water and steam explosion yielded 0.19 and 0.15 t bioethanol/t biomass, respectively. As observed in the study by Eggeman and Elander (2005), the direct chemical pretreatment cost is over fivefold higher than with the use of autohydrolysis; there is, therefore, a need for recovery, recycle and reuse of the chemicals in order to reduce this expenditure (Baral & Shah, 2017).
2.2 Hydrolysis
The hydrolysis step in bioethanol production involves the conversion of cellulose and hemicellulose to glucose and xylose or mannose, respectively. Crystallinity makes cellulose harder to hydrolyse than hemicellulose. To hydrolyse cellulose successfully, acids (chemical hydrolysis) or enzymes (enzymatic hydrolysis or saccharification) can be used.
Chemical hydrolysis with dilute acids is preferred to concentrated acids due to less inhibitor formation, reduced equipment corrosion, and absence of acid recycling, which reduces investment. Dilute acid hydrolysis is conducted at 1–5 wt% acid for 3–120 min at 180–240 °C (Abo et al., 2019). Glucose yields of ca. 60% are typically achieved but hemicellulose is mostly degraded to furfural and humin substances. A two-step process was suggested with the first step focusing on xylan hydrolysis (140–160 °C) and the second step focusing on cellulose hydrolysis (160–180 °C). Such a system could increase the total sugar yield (TSY) to 80% with the production of less inhibitors (Hamelinck et al., 2005). Even if yields are improved with this two-step approach, the challenges of the chemical hydrolysis process still exist, although they are minimised substantially.
Enzymatic hydrolysis is the preferred form of hydrolysis due to the low temperature, near-neutral pH, reaction specificity, absence of inhibitor production and higher selectivity rates in comparison with chemical hydrolysis (Binod et al., 2011; Galbe & Zacchi, 2007). Enzymatic hydrolysis is a promising alternative to dilute acid but has two major challenges. One is the high cost of the enzymes, which account for ca. 16% of the bioethanol cost. The second is the long treatment time (72 h) needed to achieve maximum yield (El-Zawawy et al., 2011; Humbird et al., 2011; Yu et al., 2016). Most of the enzymes used in the process are commercial grade enzymes and the cost associated with their application brings the feasibility of this process into question. In the production of bioethanol from LCB, enzyme cost is one of the major bottlenecks (Binod et al., 2011). Due to this, most researchers have focused on the use of lower enzyme concentrations, using new cellulolytic cocktails or substitution of the enzymatic hydrolysis with other treatments to achieve similar or higher yields (Abo et al., 2019). Also, with enzymatic hydrolysis the solid loading is usually maintained < 5% to prevent technical problems such as ineffective mixing and mas and heat transfer defects that might impair the enzyme activities (Broda et al., 2022).
2.3 Fermentation
Fermentation is the biological conversion of glucose (and xylose) into alcohol by an enzyme secreted by a microorganism. In bioethanol production, the two microorganisms mostly used to convert glucose are Saccharomyces cerevisiae (S. cerevisiae) and Zymomonas mobilis since their tolerance to ethanol facilitates high conversion yields. However, the susceptibility of Zymomonas mobilis to contamination makes S. cerevisiae the most used microorganism for bioethanol production. The wild strain of S. cerevisiae commonly used can only ferment hexose sugars (Eq. 1). A different microorganism is therefore needed to ferment xylose and pentose sugars in general (Eq. 2).
Equations 1 and 2 represent the formation of ethanol from glucose and xylose, respectively. Both equations show that given 1 g of either glucose or xylose, the stoichiometric maximum amount of ethanol that can be produced is 0.511 g. However, this yield is not obtained in reality due to the formation of other metabolic products such as acetate, lactate, glycerol, xylitol and hydrogen (Robak & Balcerek, 2018; Scully & Orlygsson, 2015).
The fermentation process may be performed separately from the hydrolysis process or simultaneously (Fig. 2). Separate hydrolysis and fermentation (SHF) is a sequential process involving hydrolysis and fermentation in two separate reactors. Usually, enzymatic hydrolysis is conducted at 45–50 °C to produce sugars after which they are fermented to alcohol at a lower temperature (30–37 °C). This configuration is faced with the challenge of the produced glucose inhibiting the activities of β-glucosidase and cellulase (Abo et al., 2019). Furthermore, the capital cost is increased due to the need for two reactors for the process and the time taken. However, this configuration allows for easier recycling of the fermentation microbes.
Simultaneous saccharification and fermentation (SSF) involves performing the hydrolysis and fermentation process in the same reactor at the same time. In this configuration, the sugars produced from the hydrolysis are immediately fermented by the microbes to ethanol, thereby reducing glucose inhibition and contamination (Fig. 2). The SSF has a lower capital cost and higher yield in comparison with SHF. The major challenge of SSF is the lower sugar yields due to the reduced temperatures (< 37 °C) required for the survival of the fermenting microorganisms, which in consequence reduces the yield of ethanol.
A comparison of SHF and SSF shows that the SSF configuration gave higher yield and ethanol productivity than SHF (Table 2). Fernandes et al. (2018) compared SSF and SHF for cardoon and rockrose pretreated with DAP; ethanol yield and productivity were higher in SSF, and the reaction time was shorter in SSF (24 h) than in SHF (72 h + 24 h). At the optimum conditions for a lignocellulose mixture, SSF required less cellulase (80 U/g) and longer time (30 h) and gave higher ethanol productivity (1.396 g/L/h) than SHF. The latter used 132.9 U/g of cellulose for 27.33 h to yield only 0.929 g/L/h of ethanol (Althuri & Banerjee, 2019). SSF (41.9 g/L) gave 1.64-folds higher ethanol yield than SHF (25.40 g/L). Other researchers have also observed a reduced ethanol yield with similar ethanol productivities from SSF in comparison with SHF and have stated that the lower temperature for the hydrolysis in the SSF was the main reason for the inferior yield (Guerrero et al., 2018; Thanapimmetha et al., 2019). The efficiency of the process was therefore affected by the lack of thermophilic or pentose-fermenting microbes. Therefore, although SSF has become more attractive, the process demands an improvement to improve ethanol yields.
3 Current strategies in addressing bioethanol production challenges
3.1 Improvement to individual steps
3.1.1 Pretreatment
Current trends in biomass pretreatment have been focused on using environmentally friendly methods while reducing cost. To ensure that pretreatment is eco-friendly, focus has been placed on that are non-toxic, biodegradable and recyclable. This has promoted the recent interest in deep eutectic solvents (DES) (Ullah et al., 2023). DES are a new class of designer solvents made up of renewable materials found in nature (Amesho et al., 2023; Loong et al., 2021). They are made up of two or more components held together by strong hydrogen bonds. The components are referred to as a hydrogen bond donor (HBD) and a hydrogen bond acceptor (HBA) with respect to their function in the designer solvent. DES are produced by heating a HBA and a HBD together at temperatures below 100 °C for less than 2 h to produce a homogeneous, colourless liquid after cooling to room temperature. They have shown their effectiveness in the removal of lignin from biomass (Ceaser et al., 2023).
There is a variety of natural components that can be used to produce different types of DES. However, acid- and polyalcohol-based DES have shown better effectiveness in biomass delignification (Table 3). Choline chloride (ChCl) is mostly used as a HBA due to its low cost, biodegradability and non-toxicity in combination with a variety of acids or/and polyalcohols as HBDs. Lactic, formic, oxalic and p-coumaric acids are a few among those reported to perform well in biomass pretreatment. Lignin removal from 28 to 99% and almost complete hemicellulose solubilisation have been reported, giving a pretreated cellulose pulp that was saccharified with a 86% of efficiency (Chen et al., 2019a, 2019b, 2019c; Kim et al., 2018; Tan et al., 2018, 2019). In comparison to the other acid-based DES, oxalic acid is toxic and has caustic properties, thereby reducing its applicability (Kohli et al., 2020). Polyalcohols such as ethylene glycol and glycerol have shown lignin removal and hemicellulose solubilisation of up to 88% and 87%, respectively, with a saccharification efficiency of up to 96% (Zhang et al., 2016; Zulkefli et al., 2017). This shows that while the acid-based DES might be more effective in removing lignin and solubilising hemicellulose, the polyalcohol-based DES are better at promoting saccharification of the pretreated biomass.
Recently, there has been a growing interest in the use of ternary DES (TDES). TDES offer flexibility to operate at higher solids loading (up to 30%) without having a detrimental effect on the capacity to extract lignin and hemicellulose from the biomass and the saccharification efficiency (Chen et al., 2019a; Ji et al., 2020; Kandanelli et al., 2018). A comparison of TDES with two acid-based DES as HBDs showed higher performance than DES having only one acid-based HBD (Xing et al., 2018). Yan et al. (2021) later found out that TDES with both a polyalcohol- and acid-based HBD, not only had similar performance as TDES with two acid-based HBDs but also retained more glucan, making them attractive for bioethanol production. Other studies replaced the natural acid-based HBDs with other strong acids such as H2SO4, p-toluene sulfonic acid, AlCl3, FeCl3 and CrCl3 (; Chen et al., 2018a, 2018b, 2019a; Ji et al., 2020). However, these replacements either required strong acid supplementation after DES recycling or contained leaching organic acid groups, defeating the purpose of producing a “green” and recyclable pretreatment medium (Chen et al., 2018a, 2018b; Deng et al., 2015). It is therefore paramount to revisit and improve the use of natural acid-based and polyalcohol-based HBDs for biomass pretreatment.
DES pretreatments can also be performed in combination or in sequence with other treatments. Li et al. (2019) compared a microwave-assisted DES pretreatment and a conventional heating DES pretreatment using ChCl:lactic acid (1:10) on Pinus spp. wood. Microwave-assisted DES pretreatment resulted in less glucan removal (10%) in comparison with conventional heating (19%) due to the reduced reaction time. Despite the high lignin removal (66.6%) by conventional DES pretreatment, the cellulose conversion after enzymatic hydrolysis was only 41.6% while the lower lignin removal (42.8%) by the microwave-assisted pretreatment produced 81.9% cellulose conversion. This was attributed to an improved removal of non- and low-substituted xylan as well as highly-substituted lignin with microwave irradiation, causing morphological changes to the biomass and making cellulose more accessible to enzymatic hydrolysis. Chen and Wan (2018) also achieved lignin removals of 72.2%, 79.60% and 65.2% for switchgrass, corn stover and Miscanthus, respectively, using microwave-assisted ChCl: lactic acid pretreatment at 800 W, 152 °C for 45 s. The lignin purity obtained was between 85 and 87% in all cases. Despite the loss of some xylose to the liquid fraction during pretreatment, a twofold, fivefold and twofold increase in sugar yield was observed in comparison with untreated biomass for corn stover, switchgrass and Miscanthus, respectively. In addition, the microwave-assisted pretreatment consumed less energy than with conventional heating.
Ji et al. (2020) investigated the use of an oil bath (110 °C, 4 h), microwave (MW) (80 °C, 20 min), ultrasound (US) (room temperature, 30 min) and combinations of ultrasound (room temperature, 30 min) and oil bath (110 °C,4 h) and ultrasound (room temperature, 30 min) and microwave (80 °C, 20 min) on garlic skin (GS) and green onion root (GOR) for several binary DES (BDES) and TDES. Lignin removal in the binary DES improved in the order ChCl:oxalic acid < ChCl:urea < ChCl:glycerol for both GS and GOR. A similar trend was observed when AlCl3·6H2O was added to the various BDES to form TDES. Similar cellulose contents were obtained irrespective of the type of BDES or TDES used for GS while for GOR the ChCl:glycerol (:AlCl3·6H2O) gave the highest cellulose content in the pretreated biomass. The effects on TDES were significantly higher than in BDES. An evaluation of MW pretreatment gave high lignin removal while combined US-MW further improved the removal of lignin and the cellulose content of the pretreated biomass. For instance, MW processing with ChCl:glycerol:AlCl3·6H2O gave a lignin removal and a cellulose content in the GOR residue of 87.6% and 40.9%, respectively, while US-MW gave 92.3% and 50.3%. Furthermore, the nearly fourfold increase in the yield of total reducing sugars with US-MW over MW alone was attributed to the significant reduction in the crystallinity of the residue (8.1 vs. 16.9) by the action of the ultrasonication.
Biomass pretreatment is targeted at improving the hydrolysis step and therefore more consideration should be given to the influence of extent of delignification on hydrolysis. Procentese et al. (2015) reported that using ChCl:glycerol (1:2), 30% delignification, 83% glucose and 50% xylose hydrolysis can be achieved giving a 70% TSY. Biomass delignification can be improved with an increase in the acid content of the DES (Kumar et al., 2016). However, a 100% delignification is not essential to obtain optimum hydrolysis efficiency. It was determined that about 65–70% of lignin in biomass could be removed easily as far as lignin redeposition was avoided (Bhagia et al., 2018). This was supported by the findings by Zhang et al. (2016), who reported that even if lignin removal increased from 64.7 to 93.1% in corncob when the acid content in DES was augmented (ChCl: lactic acid from 1:2 to 1:15), the enzymatic hydrolysis yield barely improved (79.1–83.5%). Excessive delignification could also cause the destruction of cellulose structure creating a less favourable fibre morphology for enzymatic hydrolysis, thereby leading to a reduction in hydrolysis yields (Lin et al., 2020).
Thus far, DES pretreated biomass have been reported to contain very little inhibitors that could affect hydrolysis or fermentation. Procentese et al. (2017) observed that ChCl:glycerol pretreatment between 80 and 150 °C for 3 to 16 h produced acetic acid (0.12–0.19 g/L) and furfural (0.11–0.15 g/L) as the main inhibitors of the fermentation microorganisms, but these concentrations were too low to affect the fermentation process. The same researchers also reported low acetic acid (0.09–0.16 g/L) and furfural (0.12 g/L) concentrations for ChCl:urea whereas acetic acid (0.01–0.08 g/L), furfural (0.01–0.04 g/L) and HMF (0.02–0.09 g/L) were the inhibitors formed with ChCl:imidazole (Procentese et al., 2015). Pretreating rice straw with ChCl:lactic acid at 120 °C for 3 h produced 0.28 g/L furfural (Huang et al., 2020). Given the threshold of S. cerevisiae for inhibitors such as acetic acid (0.5 g/L), HMF (0.1 g/L) and furfural (0.5 g/L), the values reported above can be considered to be well below those required to avoid significant inhibition (Baral & Shah, 2014). Phenolic based inhibitors such as p-coumaric, ferulic, benzoic, vanillic and syringic acids were produced when lignin degraded during pretreatments at elevated temperature and extended time (Xu et al., 2018). Nevertheless, the concentrations were still low (< 1 mM) at these severe conditions. Therefore, DES-based pretreatments imply low inhibitor production and no detoxification requirements after pretreatment.
3.1.2 Mechanocatalysis and hydrolysis
To reduce the cost associated with the enzymes, researchers have suggested either enzyme recycling, or the substitution of the enzymatic hydrolysis with a process based on mechanocatalysis combined with autohydrolysis (Arthur et al., 2021; Calcio Gaudino et al., 2021; Chen et al., 2021a, 2021b). Enzyme recycling processes such as ultrafiltration are generally costly and have enzyme losses close to 20%, and the stability of the recycled enzymes may be affected by the recovery and recycling operations (Chen et al., 2021a, 2021b). This has made mechanocatalysis an alternative to be considered. Mechanocatalysis involves the combination of mechanical treatment with a catalyst to improve solubility and reactivity. Mechanical treatment, especially ball milling can reduce the crystallinity of cellulose, improving the rate of hydrolysis (Sitotaw et al., 2021; Wu et al., 2021). Mechanical treatment was reported to improve the hydrolysis rate by 23–59% while the product yield was increased by 5–25% (Aditiya et al., 2016). A classic mechanocatalysis process is made up of three steps, (1) dosage and impregnation of small amounts of a strong acid (pKa ≤ − 3) in diethyl ether, (2) removal of the diethyl ether by vacuum evaporation, and (3) ball milling at room temperature to convert water-insoluble polymers to water-soluble oligomeric products (WSP).
The addition of solid acids or mineral acids even before the mechanical treatment can depolymerise lignocellulosic biomass to obtain 10–20% WSP (Käldström et al., 2014b). Mechanocatalysis of cellulose causes a conformational change to the pyranic ring structure facilitating protonation and fracturing of the β-1,4-glucosidic bonds to produce WSP. The crystalline regions of cellulose are totally converted into amorphous regions resulting in the disappearance of the crystalline peak at 22.7° in an x-ray diffractogram even at low acid loadings (0.25 mmol/g) and milling time (20 min) (Yu et al., 2016). Although it has been suggested that there is no acid loss during the mechanocatalysis process, other researchers have shown that about 11% of the acid can be lost after the removal of diethyl ether (Dong et al., 2017; Yu et al., 2016). This was attributed to water/solvent vapour being a carrier for part of the acid during vacuum evaporation and the cleavage of diethyl ether by the acid to alcohol, an esterification reaction and vacuum evaporation of the product (Dong et al., 2017).
Yu et al. (2016) observed that without acid-impregnation, only 2% WSP were produced from cellulose after 60 min of ball milling. Acid-impregnation with 0.25 mmol/g H2SO4 gave 64% and 90% WSP after 20 and 60 min, respectively. Further, increasing the acid concentration to 0.60 mmol/g resulted in 82% and 99% WSP after 20 and 60 min, respectively while a further increase to 1.0 mmol/g resulted in a limited increase in WSP. Given that the major contention with mechanical treatments is the energy consumption, a convenient combination of acid load and milling time has to be established for each biomass type to minimize pretreatment cost.
The produced WSP can then be further hydrolysed in water at 100–150 °C for 0.5–2 h to give the desired monomeric sugars and lignin, easily separable by filtration (Chen et al., 2021a, 2021b; Käldström et al., 2014a). Cellobiose, a dimer of glucose can be almost totally converted into glucose at low acid concentrations (Yu et al., 2016). The mechanical forces applied were suggested to help reduce the cellobiose to glucose energy barrier by almost five-fold for hydrolysis (Amirjalayer et al., 2019).
Dong et al. (2017) conducted a study comparing direct acid impregnation before ball milling (DAMC) with the conventional mechanocatalysis (CMC) processes for pinewood sawdust. In the DAMC process, about 95% water-soluble products were obtained within 45 min milling time at high acid concentration (0.45 mol/kg biomass) or within 75 min at low acid concentration (0.20 mol/kg biomass). However, the highest total reducing sugars (TRS) yield (30%) after water hydrolysis at 100 °C was obtained at 0.45 mol/kg for 30 min during DAMC while for the CMC process a similar yield was obtained with 0.30 mol/kg for 30 min. The CMC process helped to soften the biomass, allowing easy cleavage into oligomers and monomers at lower acid concentration and reduced time.
Raw cellulose, acid-impregnated and unimpregnated mechanocatalysed cellulose were hydrolysed at 150 °C for 30 min to determine the effectiveness of the treatments on glucose recovery (Yu et al., 2016). Glucose yield was 6% for raw cellulose, while ball milling for 40 min led to 28% glucose recovery. Cellulose impregnated before ball milling with 0.25 mmol/g and 0.50 mmol/g of H2SO4 for 40 min gave a similar glucose recovery (87%). Dilute acid hydrolysis conducted on wood biomass at 150 °C with 0.25 wt% H2SO4 for 30 min, 96% galactose, 99% arabinose, 72% xylose, 74% mannose and 7% glucose were obtained representing a 32% TSY. Ball milling for 40 min combined with dilute acid hydrolysis at the same conditions gave 99% galactose, 99% arabinose, 99% xylose, 92% mannose and 16% glucose, for a total 45% TSY. Additional impregnation of the wood biomass with 0.25 mmol/g of acid before ball milling for 40 min, followed by aqueous hydrolysis at 150 °C gave 95% galactose, 99% arabinose, 98% xylose, 90% mannose and 92% glucose, representing 94% TSY. From this study, ball milling combined with dilute acid hydrolysis was found to be an effective method to obtain high hemicellulose-based monomers, whereas mechanocatalysis allowed an almost total recovery of the C5 and C6 saccharides forming cellulose and hemicellulose in biomass.
After obtaining 100% WSP from beechwood mechanocatalysed with 0.9 mmol/g H2SO4, performing hydrolysis at 140 °C for 1 h gave 84% glucose, 89% xylose and 3.9% cellobiose (Käldström et al., 2014b). The hydrolysis of WSP obtained from beechwood, pinewood and sugarcane bagasse produced 88–92% glucose, 93–98% xylose, and 3.6–8.0% cellobiose yields after water hydrolysis at 140 °C for 1 h (Käldström et al., 2014a). The effects of temperature on the hydrolysis of WSP into glucose, xylose and cellobiose was then determined. Xylose was the first monomeric sugar to be formed at temperatures 20–30 °C lower than glucose. The highest xylose yields were obtained at 120, 135 and 140 °C for sugarcane bagasse (99%), beechwood (94%) and pinewood (99%), respectively whereas the highest glucose yields were at 140 and 145 °C for sugarcane bagasse (95%), beechwood (92%) and pinewood (88%). Although the hydrolysis followed the same trend as in DAP, the lower hydrolysis temperature (120–140 °C) in comparison with two-step DAP (180 and 210 °C) ensured that lesser inhibitors were produced.
Hydrolysis of α-cellulose, sugarcane bagasse, beechwood and pinewood at 140 °C produced furfural as the main inhibitor (Käldström et al., 2014a, 2014b; Meine et al., 2012). Käldström et al. (2014a) found that since the highest xylose yield was obtained at lower temperature than glucose, part of the xylose formed was converted to furfural as the temperature was increased to increase the production of glucose. At 120 and 135 °C for sugarcane bagasse and beechwood, respectively the furfural yield did not exceed 1.5% of the initial xylan present; however, at 140 °C the furfural yield was 5.0 and 5.7%, respectively. The authors suggested an initial separation of the xylose fraction at the optimal temperatures before proceeding to the hydrolysis to produce glucose as a solution. However, the solubility of both products in water makes this difficult to accomplish.
Unlike in most treatment processes, where the lignin presence affects the process efficiency, the rate of depolymerisation is not affected by the biomass lignin content during the mechanocatalysis process (Käldström et al., 2014b). The main disadvantage of mechanocatalysis is the energy expenditure, which is similar to that of a standard mechanical treatment. However, it has been reported that for the same equipment, increasing the biomass load from grams to kilograms results in a reduction in energy expenditure per mass of biomass (Kaufman Rechulski et al., 2015). Also, the low acid requirement (0.25–1.0 mmol/g cellulose) to achieve more than 90% conversion of cellulose to glucose sugar implies less neutralisation and detoxification (Kessler et al., 2020; Shrotri et al., 2013). This makes it an attractive process for large scale applications (Shrotri et al., 2017).
3.1.3 Fermentation
To address the inefficient hydrolysis issue due to low temperature in SSF, presaccharification and simultaneous saccharification and fermentation (PSSF) was developed (Table 4). In this process, saccharification is conducted first at 50 °C, and then temperature is reduced below 37 °C to perform the SSF. Stoichiometric yield (76.1%) and ethanol productivity of 0.39 g/L/h were obtained after 72 h for PSSF while lower results were observed with SSF (56.3%, 0.31 g/L/h, 72 h) and SHF (63.4%, 0.31 g/L/h, 82 h) (Thanapimmetha et al., 2019). Guerrero et al. (2018) also observed higher PSSF theoretical yield (86.6%) and ethanol productivity (0.67 g/L/h) after 72 h in comparison with SHF (85.9%, 0.40 g/L/h after 120 h) and SSF (82.8%, 0.64 g/L/h after 72 h). Interestingly, Morales-Martínez et al. (2017) obtained 97.5% theoretical yield for SHF, 96.1% for PSSF and 77.9% for SSF. The authors have shown that the effectiveness of the PSSF is based on the effectiveness of the presaccharification stage giving higher yields and productivity than the SSF process.
The presence of pentose sugars such as xylose in the hydrolysate obtained after saccharification presents an additional opportunity to increase the yield of ethanol. Processes involving a mixed culture of hexose- and pentose-fermenting microbes are known as simultaneous saccharification and co-fermentation (SSCF) (Table 4). Another advantage of SSCF is the absence of sugar feedback inhibition (Robak & Balcerek, 2018). The advancements in genetic engineering have spearheaded this process. Qin et al. (2018) used an engineered xylose-fermenting strain of S. cerevisiae to produce ethanol from corn stover pretreated with ethylenediamine. Presaccharification was first performed for 12 h at 50 °C on the pretreated biomass before SSCF at 34 °C for 96 h. Increasing the solids loading had a higher detrimental effect on glucan than on xylan conversion. Ethanol yields of 75.4%, 81.2% and 80.9% were obtained at biomass loads of 6%, 7.5% and 9%. Wirawan et al. (2020) recently studied the continuous co-fermentation of alkali-pretreated sugarcane bagasse using Zymomonas mobilis immobilized on polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) beads and suspended Pichia stipites. An ethanol yield of 81.8% and a productivity of 0.705 g/L/h were obtained with SSCF, while those were 70.65% and 1.868 g/L/h with SHCF. It was observed that even if ethanol yields could be kept high for a short time, cell activity decayed for Pichia stipites and therefore the addition of nutrient solution was needed. Ko et al. (2018) reported that engineered yeast strains were less tolerant to the inhibitors produced during the production of lignocellulosic ethanol. Inhibitors such as acetic acid and phenolics had a stronger effect on the strains of engineered yeast during SSCF because of their higher concentration than in SHCF. Zhu et al. (2016) developed a co-culture of a xylose-fermenting and inhibitor-tolerant S. cerevisiae strain for bioethanol production from DAP corn stover. In comparison with either the solo inhibitor-tolerant or xylose-fermenting strains, the co-culture SSCF improved ethanol yields by 21.2% and 40.0%, respectively. Furthermore, presaccharification for 3 h before SSCF resulted in 89.0% ethanol yield.
As already explained (Sect. 2.3), the low operating temperature used in SSF and SSCF does not ensure hydrolysis and optimal sugar yield. To address this challenge, thermophilic microorganisms that can be used at temperatures 50–70 °C have become a focus of interest for these processes (Di Donato et al., 2019). Usage of thermophilic microbes makes the cooling step from the ethanol production process unnecessary. Native microbes of the genera Clostridium and Thermoanaerobacter have been found successful in addressing this issue. Orlygsson (2012) used Clostridium strain AK1 to ferment cellulose hydrolysate from various biomasses at 45 °C to obtain a 66.75% yield of ethanol. Fermenting avicel with C. thermocellum at 60 °C gave yields of 3.0 g/L which was later increased by co-culturing with C. thermolacticum to 4.19 g/L representing 75% of the stoichiometric yield (Scully & Orlygsson, 2015). Thermoanaerobacter sp. DBT-IOCX2 was able to ferment both glucose and xylose at 70 °C giving yields of 83.57% and 91.12% (Singh et al., 2018). The anaerobic bacterium species Thermoanaerobacter italicus Pentocrobe 411 fermented complex sugars of glucose and xylose from non-detoxified DAP wheat straw, birch, sugarcane bagasse, oil palm empty fruit brunch and frond, cardboard and mixed biowaste at 66 °C (Andersen et al., 2015). Ethanol yields obtained were 92–100% of the theoretical ethanol yields for all biomasses. Introduction of thermophilic microbes has therefore led to modest gains in ethanol yield while reducing the formation of side products.
3.2 Cost reduction
3.2.1 Pretreatment
The cost of biomass pretreatment is of a major factor in the economic feasibility of lignocellulosic ethanol (Wang & Lee, 2021). Pretreatment alone accounts for up to one-third of the total production cost in a bioethanol conversion plant and it is therefore necessary to find ways to reduce the cost (Rodrigues Gurgel da Silva et al., 2018). A study of various traditional pretreatment techniques concluded that DAP was the most favourable, boasting both the highest economic and environmental margins (Rodrigues Gurgel da Silva et al., 2018). Environmental margins of liquid hot water, ammonia fibre explosion and organosolv pretreatment were 30–40% lower than DAP while SE was the lowest by 47%. In terms of the economic margins liquid hot water and ammonia fibre explosion are below 50% of DAP, while SE and organosolv do not exceed 25% of the DAP's economic margin.
Research has focused on the reuse of the pretreatment chemicals as means to reduce cost. Although some of the studies conducted using mineral acids and alkalis such as H2SO4 and NaOH have recycled and reused the waste liquor, the limited number of cycles in which the chemicals can be reused and the low efficiency of the liquor during consecutive pretreatment cycles are still challenges to be resolved (Chen et al., 2021a, 2021b). Similar recycling and loss of pretreatment efficiency issues at extended recycle runs have been reported for DES. Nevertheless, recycling and reuse of the pretreatment chemicals for the first two to three recycle runs present comparable results (Chen et al., 2018b, 2019b). Furthermore, higher cost reductions can be obtained with DES given that it is cheaper than NaOH and that 95% of the DES can be recycled in comparison to only 70% of the NaOH (Cha et al., 2016; Kim et al., 2018; Li et al., 2018; New et al., 2019). This implies DES is the most cost-effective pretreatment chemical when recycled and reused.
Few studies have been conducted on the cost of DES-based biomass pretreatments. Peng et al. (2021) recently determined the cost of ChCl:urea and ChCl:lactic acid pretreatments on the production of bioethanol from rice straw. The DES pretreatment, the solids load and temperature had little impact on the total capital investment required. However, the total operating cost was lower with ChCl:lactic acid than with ChCl:urea. Further analysis of both pretreatments showed that the highest contributors to the operating cost were steam, cooling water and electricity. This was due to the cost of the recovery and purification of the DES by distillation to remove other solvents such as water, ethanol, acetone and impurities. The authors also concluded that a higher solids loading would be beneficial in reducing the cost of the DES recycling.
3.2.2 Hydrolysis
As stated in Sect. 3.1.2, enzymatic hydrolysis is the most expensive step in the bioethanol production process due to the cost of enzymes (Larnaudie et al., 2019; Mesa et al., 2016). The cost of the enzymes was estimated to account for up to 71% of the total hydrolysis cost and 35% of the lignocellulose bioethanol cost (Baral & Shah, 2017; Wang et al., 2022). Although, treatments such as dilute acid hydrolysis are relatively cheaper in comparison with enzymatic treatment, one of their major drawbacks is the production of inhibitors.
The use of mechanocatalysis/water hydrolysis presents a potential solution to addressing the cost issues associated with enzymatic hydrolysis. The low acid concentration, cheaper chemicals, higher solid loading and reduced reaction time could serve well in this situation. A comparison of a mechanocatalysis/water hydrolysis production of ethanol with a National Renewable Energy Laboratory’s (NREL) cellulosic ethanol process involving DAP and enzymatic hydrolysis, showed that the mechanocatalysed process led to a 30% lower ethanol cost and a 5% reduction in greenhouse gases than the NREL ethanol process (Nguyen, 2017). The mechanocatalysis/water hydrolysis step can either be used on untreated biomass and/or pretreated biomass. For a pretreated biomass, the savings are mainly centred on the enzyme cost and time for the hydrolysis step. Although pretreating the biomass with a “green” method such as DES would increase both the biomass crystallinity and cost, it would reduce the presence of lignin, improve the porosity of biomass, and potentially reduce the milling time and acid required, thus avoiding the need for detoxification. Furthermore, the hemicelluloses extracted during the pretreatment could be recovered and recycled into mechanocatalysis step, reducing sugar losses.
Conventional mechanocatalysis/water hydrolysis can be conducted directly on the raw biomass. The advantages of this pretreatment are the potential savings on the cost of product separation and recycling, as well as the savings on enzyme and time in the hydrolysis step. However, the detoxification required after hydrolysis and its high water consumption become factors to be considered (Baral & Shah, 2014, 2017; Kessler et al., 2020). Llano et al. (2021) analysed various detoxification processes based on technical, economic, environmental and social factors. The analysis showed that from a techno-economic point of view overliming was the best detoxification method. However, when all the factors were considered for an ethanol biorefinery, activated carbon detoxification was the most suitable. This agrees with other studies reported that activated carbon and calcium hydroxide were the most effective detoxification methods in an ethanol biorefinery (Kordala et al., 2021).
3.2.3 Fermentation
The yield of bioethanol during fermentation depends on the ability of the yeast to convert the available monosaccharides. The introduction of pentose fermenting microbes has ensured maximum use of the monomeric sugars available in the hydrolysate, improving process economics. The cost of equipment and installations for handling and treating the pentose containing hydrolysate increases the capital cost. Vasconcelos et al. (2020) noticed that despite the higher energy consumption and increased equipment quantity, co-fermenting the pentose LCB sugar hydrolysates from acid treatments with the hexose sugars, lowered the ethanol production cost thereby improving the economic performance.
The cost of yeast and its preparation for the fermentation process also needs to be considered. Recycling the yeast can lower this cost. The difference in density between yeast cells and LCB makes centrifugation an adequate method. At low speeds, the denser LCB can be obtained while at high speeds the lighter yeast cells can be recovered (Matano et al., 2013). Yeast recycling rises the inoculation rate, reduces the amount of sugar consumed by yeast grow and improves the ability of the microbes to adapt and resist inhibitors, thereby increasing the yield of bioethanol (Chen et al., 2021a, 2021b). Matano et al. (2013) observed a decreasing cell recycle (88.3%, 56.4% and 5.8%) with an increase in centrifugal force (20 g, 50 g and 100 g, respectively) in a two-phase yeast cell recycling after fermentation. At a centrifugal force of 50 g with five consecutive recycling cycles after fermentation, a wild strain of S. cerevisiae gave an average of 71.9% of ethanol while an engineered strain gave 86.3%. Cell recycling was found to be an effective means of reducing the cost of inoculum preparation. A high ethanol yield of 90.3% was obtained after six fermentation-recycle runs when S. cerevisiae was engineered to tolerate multiple stress and elevated temperature was used (Hama et al., 2018). Therefore, although recycling is beneficial with both wild and engineered yeast strains, the use of engineered strains improves ethanol yield.
3.3 Current advances in process configurations
The advances in the individual process steps have led to improved process configurations, with less waste treatment requirements and overall cost. Traditionally, process improvements such as SSF or SSCF are applied in place of SHF. The current advancements of these options deal with the inclusion of a pretreatment step to minimise the cost of washing. Such a configuration would result in the “one-pot” (OP) system, thereby reducing the number of required vessels for the entire bioethanol production process (Fig. 3).
Advances on the use of DES in biomass processing have created opportunities by combining the pretreatment with the hydrolysis and fermentation steps (Fig. 3a iii). However, the main issue with this has been the stability and activity of the hydrolytic enzymes in DES, as well as the effect of DES on the grow and activity of the fermentation yeasts (Wahlström et al., 2016; Xu et al., 2018). For instance, Wahlström et al. (2016) reported that although the various DES tested performed well in delignifying the biomass and improving the enzymatic hydrolysis of the pretreated and washed material, the DES affected both the enzyme stability and performance, thus reducing the yield of sugars in a OP system.
Gunny et al. (2015) investigated the effects of ChCl:glycerol and ChCl:ethylene glycol on the activity of cellulase. About 90% of the original cellulase activity was maintained in the presence of 10–20% v/v DES in citrate buffer at 30 °C. This was attributed to the epoxidase hydrolases activity present in polyalcohol-based DES such as glycerol and ethylene glycol. Also, the DES-cellulase system enhanced glucose production (> 183%) and reduced energy consumption (127.7 J/g) in comparison with an alkaline system (133% and 159.7 J/g, respectively). Similar glucose production rates were observed as concentration of solids was increased from 5 to 20%, both in ChCl:ethylene glycol and ChCl:glycerol. However, at 30% solids, the higher viscosity of glycerol in comparison to ethylene glycol resulted in ca. half the glucose production rate at similar conditions due to reduced ionic mobility influencing both the reaction thermodynamics and the kinetics.
A substitution of the Aspergillus sp. cellulase with an halophilic Aspergillus sp. cellulase in the same DES-cellulase system showed improved cellulase activity (Nagoor Gunny et al., 2019). Addition of 15% v/v ChCl:glycerol to 1% cellulase improved the enzyme activity by 30% and 40% within 1 h. At 24 and 48 h, there was no difference between the cellulase activity with and without DES whereas exceeding 20% v/v DES reduced cellulase activity. Tests conducted with microcrystalline cellulose and rice husk showed a two to three-fold increase in glucose yields at 20% v/v DES as compared to the system without DES.
A recent study conducted by Huang et al. (2020) investigated a OP system for simultaneous pretreatment and enzymatic hydrolysis (Fig. 3a ii). ChCl:lactic acid was used in pretreating rice straw (15% solids loading) at 120 °C for 3 h, after which the slurry was diluted with citrate buffer and the pH adjusted to 4.8 before the addition of enzymes. An increase in DES concentration had a negative effect on the cellulase activity and sugar yield. Comparison of the traditional solid–liquid-separation (SLS) process for consecutive pretreatment and hydrolysis with the simultaneous pretreatment and hydrolysis OP approach showed that the latter produced ca. 1.6-folds higher TSY than the SLS process at the same conditions. The OP glucose yield was 69.0%, comparable to the 66.6% obtained by SLS, however the OP xylose yield was 70.0% while for SLS was only 22.4%. The difference could be ascribed to the xylan loss during pretreatment affecting the SLS xylose yield. The OP process was over 8 times more energy efficient than the SLS process at the same conditions due to the avoidance of the SLS between pretreatment and hydrolysis. Furthermore, at the capital cost for the OP system was 5.5 times lower than for the SLS system. However, the profit obtained for the SLS system ($0.20/kg) was similar to the profit from the OP system ($0.19/kg). The main reason for the slightly higher profit was due to the lower purity of the lignin recovered in the OP process, which was only 33.3%, well below the purity of lignin from the SLS system (83.7%).
Xu et al. (2018) studied the effects of various DES on the grow of S. cerevisiae (BY4741). The best results were obtained with ChCl:glycerol with a yeast growth above the control test, while all the other DES systems had lower yeast growths (Fig. 3a iii). The yeast growth increased in the order ChCl:acid-based < ChCl:basic-based < ChCl:polyalcohol-based DES. When the acid-based DES (ChCl:oxalic acid and ChCl:levulinic acid) were used, there was almost no growth of yeast. Corn stover was later used as a feedstock in an OP system to produce bioethanol through consecutive hydrolysis and fermentation at different temperature. In the one-pot system, ChCl:glycerol pretreatment was first performed at 180 °C for 2 h to remove over 60% of the lignin. Pre-saccharification of the pretreated slurry was conducted at 50 °C for 24 h by adding citrate buffer to obtain 5 wt% DES, followed by an SSF operation at 37 °C for 48 h with S. cerevisiae. This configuration produced 84.5% glucose yield that gave a 77.5% ethanol conversion yield. A further study done to ascertain if it was possible to co-ferment xylose and glucose using an engineered S. cerevisiae strain (JBEI-9009), showed that the strain could tolerate up to 10 wt% ChCl:glycerol without significantly impairing yeast growth. A longer lag phase was observed in the presence of DES as compared to the control. However, both systems with and without DES, reached similar xylose consumption levels.
4 Techno-economic analysis (TEA)
The choice between single or integrated technologies for lignocellulosic biomass impacts energy consumption, economic feasibility, and environmental safety, considering technical and economic factors. A comprehensive TEA and life cycle assessment (LCA) is crucial to determine the sustainability of DES in biorefining, especially for emerging treatments at low technology readiness levels (TRL). DES-based biorefineries must showcase technical scalability, economic viability, and environmental attractiveness to be considered sustainable compared to alternative processes. Economic indicators, including capital and operational expenditures, net present value, and payback period, are assessed based on simulation mass and energy balance results. Evaluation of technical viability and economic profitability of emerging technologies, like DES, involves TEA with simulation scaling-up exercises. However, TEA studies on DES-based biorefineries, critical for commercial scalability, are currently limited.
Recent studies shed light on the economic feasibility of DES-based biorefinery plants. Despite the critical impact of DES recycling time on operating costs, all studies found economic advantages in using DES. Kumar et al. (2020) presented the inaugural TEA for a natural 1 ton/day DES-based biorefinery, emphasizing benefits like recyclability and non-toxicity. In the study, key economic parameters such as payback period, net present value (NPV) and internal rate of return (IRR) were considered. The three scenarios considered in the study were (1) a traditional biorefinery where agricultural residues are converted into bioethanol by enzymatic saccharification and fermentation (2) a biorefinery with silica or biogas production (3) a biorefinery with value-added products such as cellulose, lignin, xylan and silica. Scenario 3 was observed to be the best scenario for the biorefinery with a positive NPV of $1.4 million, > 100% IRR, and a payback of < 2 years, highlighting the sustainability and economic advantages of multi-product biorefineries.
Additionally, Peng et al. (2021) and Zang et al. (2020) conducted TEAs for bioethanol production and co-production of various chemicals, respectively. Peng et al. (2021) investigated the use of ChCl:lactic acid and ChCl:urea as DES for pretreatment of rice straw to produce bioethanol and lignin as a by-product. The acidic-based DES resulted in a higher bioethanol yield compared to the urea-based DES giving a minimum selling price (MSP) of 2128.1 $/ton compared to 3049.9 $/ton. The MSP of ethanol obtained was lower than 3250 $/ton obtained by pretreating sugarcane bagasse with phosphoric acid or 2225 $/ton obtained by pretreating corn stover with liquid hot water (da Silva et al., 2016; van Rijn et al., 2018). In comparison to dilute sulfuric acid pretreatment on corn stover (660.4 $/ton) and wheat straw (1545.4 $/ton), the MSP was high (Hossain et al., 2019; Zhao et al., 2015). The authors concluded that the higher MSP with DES was due to lower lignin removal efficiency and a less than 80% enzymatic saccharification rate. Nevertheless, the use of high solid loading, 20% in DES pretreatment led to reduction in capital and operating costs.
The lignin removal efficiency could be increased to about 90% with the use of ChCl:formic acid DES obtaining lignin with a high purity (Ceaser et al., 2023). This could help reduce the MSP by improving the co-product, lignin extraction and purity. To address the low enzymatic saccharification rate, Huang et al. (2020) found that conducting the pretreatment and saccharification in one-pot improved the sugar yield to 75.7% when compared to the 49.9% by a traditional solid–liquid separation process. However, there was a need to double the enzyme dosage which would result in a further increase in operating cost.
Although promoting high solid loading has been suggested to enhance the minimum selling price (MSP) of bioethanol from DES pretreatment, attention should also be directed to the enzymatic saccharification process. For instance, Peng et al. (2021) observed a 23.4% reduction in MSP with a 20% increase in enzymatic hydrolysis efficiency after DES pretreatment. The presence of chemicals in the pretreated biomass often inhibits enzymatic saccharification, and replacing this step with mechanochemical hydrolysis could improve cellulose saccharification. Yu et al. (2016) achieved a 94% monomeric sugar recovery from woody biomass through mechanocatalytic treatment coupled with hydrolysis. However, there is a lack of published literature on the techno-economic analysis (TEA) and life cycle assessment (LCA) of mechanocatalyzed and hydrolyzed lignocellulosic biomass. The focus in this field has primarily been on lignin-first extraction and oligosaccharide production rather than monosaccharides for bioethanol. Nevertheless, studies by Jin et al. (2020) and Liu et al. (2020) suggest that mechano-catalytic biomass exhibits similar ethanol titers to glucose, with the latter achieving a 75% glucose yield and an economically feasible ethanol titer of 42 g/L at a high solid loading of 92 mg/mL. These findings indicate the potential of this treatment technique as a cost-effective replacement for enzymatic saccharification.
5 Implications for current and future bioethanol production
Current advances in the production of bioethanol from LCB aim at increasing the yields of ethanol using green methods. Energy consumption, time and costs are reduced. The introduction of DES has become a turning point for the pretreatment process. High solids loading are applicable with TDES without losing delignification efficiency. These green and recyclable chemicals have provided an opportunity to overcome many of the issues related to more conventional pretreatments. Furthermore, the ability to recover the components of lignocellulose from the DES solutions reduces biomass loses. Finally, the low inhibitor production excludes the need for detoxification, further reducing pretreatment cost and saving energy and time.
The ability to combine DES with hydrolytic enzymes and fermentation microbes without significantly affecting their activities is of significance to the feasibility of the bioethanol production process. This has been the main consideration in the OP configurations. The reduction in energy and cost due to the exclusion of the SLS steps between the individual processes could improve process economics. However, more studies are required to fully understand the OP system and ascertain the feasibility on the recovery of other products, and the recycling and reuse of the DES and the fermentative microorganisms.
Mechanocatalysis is an effective tool to reduce cost from both biomass pretreatment and hydrolysis. The high solids loading used in mechanocatalysis is advantageous for bioethanol production. Figure 3b i and ii shows two probable bioethanol production routes based on the current advances for individual treatment steps. Given that a breakthrough in pretreatment has been achieved with the introduction of DES, the following process to tackle to reduce costs significantly is enzymatic hydrolysis. A probable future approach involves replacement of the enzymatic hydrolysis with mechanocatalysis/water hydrolysis. It is envisioned that this process could reduce treatment time from 24–72 h to less than 6 h, while reducing cost and achieving equivalent sugar yields. Potential bottlenecks for the implementation of this process are the formation of fermentation inhibitors, and the success of its implementation as a one-pot operation.
Figure 3b i involves a DES pretreatment, mechanocatalysis, water hydrolysis and fermentation for bioethanol production whereas Fig. 3b ii involves mechanocatalysis, water hydrolysis and fermentation. Each path has its own merits and demerits. Although Fig. 3b i involves more steps, the DES pretreatment would reduce the lignin content of LCB, potentially reducing the time and energy required for the mechanocatalysis process. Additionally, given that the hemicellulose extracted during DES is recoverable, it could be recycled back into the process to improve ethanol yields. In Fig. 3b ii, the exclusion of DES pretreatment implies less energy consumption and more cost savings, however the potential of inhibitor formation increases making a detoxification step necessary to ensure that fermentation is not negatively affected.
Based on the current status of bioethanol production and the new foreseeable alternatives, there is clearly a need for additional research to achieve optimized processes that reduce the current cost of bioethanol production significantly. Also, comprehensive techno-economic evaluation of the different processes should guide the design of compact and effective plant designs. Co-production of other products such as xylitol, biogas, furfural, HMF, hydrogen, electricity and phenolic compounds should be considered as well to improve the overall economics and sustainability (Preethi et al., 2021; Queiroz et al., 2022; Zang et al., 2020).
6 Bibliometry
The literature study showed a number of publications in English related to the key subjects within this review from 1st January 2010 till the 18th January 2024. The data was compiled from Web of Science whiles the relevant associated terms were composed using the VOSViewer application. The data obtained was exported 1000 entries at a time, based on the total number. A bibliometric analysis mapping was generated for the data for the network visualization. The analysis was conducted based on co-occurrence, keywords and a fractional counting technique which allowed for the visualization of all significant terms linked to the key subjects.
A combination of the keywords “lignocellulose or lignocellulosic biomass” and “bioethanol” on the Web of Science database showed a total of 6005 results while an addition of the term “techno-economic” reduced the total results to 197 (Fig. 4a, b). In Fig. 4c, shows that the research into the techno-economics of lignocellulosic biomass production of bioethanol has eventually become widespread into various research areas lately. The research therefore stands the chance of being quickly scaled up to make it industrially relevant.
A combination of lignocellulose biomass and deep eutectic solvent showed a total of 888 results with 87% of the publications in the last 5 years (Fig. 5a, b). Addition of key words such as pretreatment, bioethanol and techno-economic consecutively gave results of 665, 79 and 4 publications. Among the 4 publications on the techno-economics of lignocellulosic biomass pretreated with deep eutectic solvent to produce bioethanol 2 were review articles while the other 2 were research articles. This shows that this aspect of research is still in its preliminary stages and would require more studies to reach an industrial ready level.
Combining keywords like lignocellulose biomass and mechanocatalysis yielded 65 results published between 2013 and 2023 (Fig. 6a, b). Further addition of keywords "hydrolysis or saccharification," "bioethanol," and "pretreatment" resulted in 46, 10, and 8 data entries, respectively. Despite its linkage to various research fields, there has been no techno-economic assessment in this subject area. Conducting more experiments is crucial to determine the industrial feasibility of this process for large-scale applications. Interestingly, a combination of keywords related to emerging technologies, including lignocellulose biomass, deep eutectic solvent pretreatment, and mechanocatalysis, did not yield any results. However, these emerging techniques could complement each other, potentially enhancing the economic attractiveness of bioethanol production.
7 Conclusions
The shift from 1 to 2G bioethanol feedstocks is anticipated, but lignocellulosic biomass (LCB) faces competitiveness challenges compared to conventional 1G biomass. This concise review explores challenges and ongoing solutions for 2G bioethanol production, focusing on pretreatment, hydrolysis, and fermentation. Addressed challenges include reagent toxicity, waste generation, recyclability of chemicals and enzymes, cost, and process configuration. Deep eutectic solvents (DES) are highlighted as environmentally friendly and cost-effective for pretreatment, offering advantages like up to 30% solid loading, less than 10% cellulose loss, extraction of high purity lignin, and chemical recyclability. Mechanocatalysis/water hydrolysis is proposed as an alternative to enzymatic hydrolysis, operating at 100% solid loading with negligible inhibitors and similar sugar yields. The review emphasizes the implementation of thermophilic ethanologenic microbes for enhanced fermentation yields and suggests integrating these strategies into an effective process configuration to make 2G bioethanol production competitive on an industrial scale.
Data availability statement
This review is entirely based on published information and does not contain any unpublished data. All the sources are included in the references of the manuscript.
Abbreviations
- LCB:
-
Lignocellulosic biomass
- 1G:
-
First generation
- 2G:
-
Second generation
- BDES:
-
Binary deep eutectic solvent
- ChCl:
-
Choline chloride
- CMC:
-
Conventional mechanocatalysis
- DAP:
-
Dilute acid pretreatment
- DAMC:
-
Direct acid impregnation before ball milling
- DES:
-
Deep eutectic solvents
- NADES:
-
Natural deep eutectic solvent
- HBA:
-
Hydrogen bond acceptor
- HBD:
-
Hydrogen bond donor
- HMF:
-
5-Hydroxymethylfurfural
- MM:
-
Million
- OP:
-
One-pot system
- PSSF:
-
Presaccharification and simultaneous saccharification and fermentation
- SE:
-
Steam explosion
- SHF:
-
Separate hydrolysis and fermentation
- SLS:
-
Solid liquid separation
- SSCF:
-
Simultaneous saccharification and co-fermentation
- SSF:
-
Simultaneous hydrolysis and fermentation
- TDES:
-
Ternary deep eutectic solvent
- TEA:
-
Techno-economic analysis
- TSY:
-
Total sugar yield
- WSP:
-
Water-soluble products
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This work was funded by Grants PID2021-123665OB-I00 funded by MCIN/AEI/ 10.13039/501100011 03 and “ERDF A way of making Europe” and TED2021-129343B− I00 funded by MCIN/AEI/ https://doi.org/10.13039/50110001103 and by the “European Union Next-GenerationEU/PRTR”and Grant 2023 CLIMA 00076, funded by AGAUR, Department of Recerca i Universitats, Department d'Acció Climàtica, Alimentació i Agenda Rural i del Fons Climàtic de la Generalitat de Catalunya. And AGAUR 2023 PRODUCTE 00023. And Diputació de Tarragona.
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Open Access funding provided thanks to the CRUE-CSIC agreement with Springer Nature. This work was funded by Grants PID2021-123665OB-I00 funded by MCIN/AEI/ 10.13039/501100011 03 and “ERDF A way of making Europe”and TED2021-129343B− I00 funded by MCIN/AEI/https://doi.org/10.13039/50110001103 and by the “European Union Next-GenerationEU/PRTR” and Grant 2023 CLIMA 00076, funded by AGAUR, Department of Recerca i Universitats, Department d'Acció Climàtica, Alimentació i Agenda Rural i del Fons Climàtic de la Generalitat de Catalunya. And AGAUR 2023 PRODUCTE 00023. And Diputació de Tarragona.
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Ceaser, R., Montané, D., Constantí, M. et al. Current progress on lignocellulosic bioethanol including a technological and economical perspective. Environ Dev Sustain (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10668-024-04792-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10668-024-04792-2