Grants and Contracts Details
Description
Cellulosic biomass is anticipated to be a broadly used raw material for biorefineries in the near future.
One of the primary products of those refineries wilt be ethanol for renewable energy applications, but the
long-term economic viability of bioethanol production will require the development of integrated
biorefineries to generate a range of chemical feedstocks similar to the breadth of feedstocks produced by
petroleum refineries. In the current approach to biomass conversion, hemicellulose-based (CS)
saccharides are both underutilized building blocks for the production of commodity chemicals and
problematic in the conversion of cellulosic feedstocks to ethanol. The goal of this project is to develop
advanced ceramic materials suitable for the selective separation and recovery of desired C5 (pentose)
saccharides from pretreated cellulosic biomass. These stable, scalable, reusable, and portable materials
will be demonstrated in processes for simultaneous treatment of cellulose and recovery of C5 sugars. A
team of four experienced investigators (with expertise in Chemical and Materials Engineering, Biosystems
and Agricultural Engineering, and Synthetic Chemistry) will lead the execution of this project. A multi-
disciplinary and multi-university approach allows a synergism in experimental techniques, design and
analysis that would not be possible with a single investigator.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 11/1/10 → 6/30/11 |
Funding
- KY Energy and Environment Cabinet: $85,720.00
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