Standard Standard

Pressurised disc refining of wheat straw as a pre-treatment approach for agricultural residues: A preliminary assessment of energy consumption and fibre composition. / Skinner, Campbell; Baker, Paul; Tomkinson, Jeremy et al.
In: Bioresource Technology, Vol. 304, 122976, 01.05.2020.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

APA

CBE

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Author

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Pressurised disc refining of wheat straw as a pre-treatment approach for agricultural residues: A preliminary assessment of energy consumption and fibre composition

AU - Skinner, Campbell

AU - Baker, Paul

AU - Tomkinson, Jeremy

AU - Richards, David

AU - Charlton, Adam

PY - 2020/5/1

Y1 - 2020/5/1

N2 - This preliminary study assesses a potential pre-treatment approach for agricultural residues, in order to improve enzyme access and cellulose digestibility that increased with increasing refining pressure. Wheat straw, an important European agri-residue, was chopped then refined at pilot-scale under different pressures (4–10 bar) and two refiner plate configurations. The most energy efficient runs used 0.94–0.96 kWh electricity; 8.9–11.0 MJ heat per kg dry matter fibre. A scaling factor specific to the machinery used in the trial suggested that wheat straw could be refined using approximately 160 kWh electricity and 980–1900 MJ heat per tonne DM yield at commercial-scale. Hemicellulose content in wheat straw at 31.8% decreased to the lowest level of 14.6% after refining at 10 bar. Pressurised disc refining did not appear to produce significant quantities of acetic acid, a key fermentation inhibitor, that could limit microbial fermentation.

AB - This preliminary study assesses a potential pre-treatment approach for agricultural residues, in order to improve enzyme access and cellulose digestibility that increased with increasing refining pressure. Wheat straw, an important European agri-residue, was chopped then refined at pilot-scale under different pressures (4–10 bar) and two refiner plate configurations. The most energy efficient runs used 0.94–0.96 kWh electricity; 8.9–11.0 MJ heat per kg dry matter fibre. A scaling factor specific to the machinery used in the trial suggested that wheat straw could be refined using approximately 160 kWh electricity and 980–1900 MJ heat per tonne DM yield at commercial-scale. Hemicellulose content in wheat straw at 31.8% decreased to the lowest level of 14.6% after refining at 10 bar. Pressurised disc refining did not appear to produce significant quantities of acetic acid, a key fermentation inhibitor, that could limit microbial fermentation.

U2 - 10.1016/j.biortech.2020.122976

DO - 10.1016/j.biortech.2020.122976

M3 - Article

VL - 304

JO - Bioresource Technology

JF - Bioresource Technology

SN - 0960-8524

M1 - 122976

ER -