Saccharification of Wheat and Rice Straw for Lactic acid Production
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Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology
Abstract
The present study explores production of lactic acid (LA) from rice straw (RS) and wheat
straw (WS), through a three-stage pretreatment process involving alkali hydrolysis and acid
hydrolysis for fermentable sugars and acid-chlorite technique for cellulose separation. Dilute
acid pretreatment of WS and RS biomass yielded significant amounts of reducing sugars
(glucose and xylose) which were subsequently fermented to LA by Bacillus licheniformis
(DGB), Bacillus sonorenesis (DGS15) and Lactobacillus reuteri. DGS15 demonstrated
superior performance, achieving LA production of 7.47 mg/ml (0.183 g/g) from RS
hydrolysate and 9.03 mg/ml (0.182 g/g) from WS hydrolysate, outperforming both Bacillus
licheniformis (DGB) and Lactobacillus reuteri in both yield and productivity. Delignification
and acid pretreated residues for cellulose separation achieved recovery rates of 57.63% and
67% from RS and WS, respectively. These findings suggest that Bacillus sonorenesis DGS15
is a favorable candidate for lactic acid production from lignocellulosic residues.
