Fermentation (Mar 2024)

Bioethanol Production from A-Starch Milk and B-Starch Milk as Intermediates of Industrial Wet-Milling Wheat Processing

  • Aleksandra Katanski,
  • Vesna Vučurović,
  • Damjan Vučurović,
  • Bojana Bajić,
  • Žana Šaranović,
  • Zita Šereš,
  • Siniša Dodić

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/fermentation10030144
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 3
p. 144

Abstract

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The present work highlights the advances of integrated starch and bioethanol production as an attractive industrial solution for complex wheat exploitation to value-added products focusing on increased profitability. Bioethanol is conventionally produced by dry-milling wheat grain and fermenting sugars obtained by the hydrolysis of starch, while unused nonfermentable kernel compounds remain in stillage as effluents. On the other hand, the wet-milling of wheat flour enables complex wheat processing for the simultaneous production of starch, gluten, and fiber. The intermediates of industrial wheat starch production are A-starch milk, containing mainly large starch granules (diameter > 10 μm), and B-starch milk, containing mainly small starch granules (diameter Saccharomyces cerevisiae Thermosacc®. Cold hydrolysis with simultaneous liquefaction and saccharification at 65 °C, a pH of 4.5, and a duration of 60 min was the most efficient and energy-saving pretreatment reaching a high conversion rate of starch to ethanol of 93% for both of the investigated substrates. A process design and cost model of bioethanol production from A-starch and B-starch milk was developed using the SuperPro Designer® v.11 (Intelligen Inc., Scotch Plains, NJ, USA) software.

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