Skip to:Content
|
Bottom
Cover image for Biological barriers to cellulosic ethanol
Title:
Biological barriers to cellulosic ethanol
Series:
Renewable energy : research, development and policies series

Renewable energy
Publication Information:
New York : Nova Science Publishers, c2010
Physical Description:
xii, 251 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 26 cm.
ISBN:
9781606922033
Added Author:

Available:*

Library
Item Barcode
Call Number
Material Type
Item Category 1
Status
Searching...
30000010237670 TP248.65.C45 B56 2010 Open Access Book Book
Searching...

On Order

Summary

Summary

The purpose of this book is to define barriers and challenges to a rapid expansion of cellulosic-ethanol production and determine ways to speed solutions through concerted application of modern biology tools as part of a joint research agenda. Although the focus was ethanol, the science applies to additional fuels that include biodiesel and other bioproducts or coproducts having critical roles in any deployment scheme. The core barrier is cellulosic-biomass recalcitrance to processing to ethanol. Biomass is composed of nature's most ready energy source, sugars, but they are locked in a complex polymer composite exquisitely created to resist biological and chemical degradation. Key to energising a new biofuel industry based on conversion of cellulose (and hemicelluloses) to ethanol is to understand plant cell-wall chemical and physical structures -- how they are synthesised and can be deconstructed. With this knowledge, innovative energy crops -- plants specifically designed for industrial processing to biofuel -- can be developed concurrently with new biology-based treatment and conversion methods. Recent advances in science and technological capabilities, especially those from the nascent discipline of systems biology, promise to accelerate and enhance this development. Resulting technologies will create a fundamentally new process and biorefinery paradigm that will enable an efficient and economic industry for converting plant biomass to liquid fuels. These key barriers and suggested research strategies to address them are described in this book. The core barrier is cellulosic-biomass recalcitrance to processing to ethanol. Biomass is composed of nature's most ready energy source, sugars, but they are locked in a complex polymer composite exquisitely created to resist biological and chemical degradation. Key to energising a new biofuel industry based on conversion of cellulose (and hemicelluloses) to ethanol is to understand plant cell-wall chemical and physical structures -- how they are synthesised and can be deconstructed. With this knowledge, innovative energy crops -- plants specifically designed for industrial processing to biofuel -- can be developed concurrently with new biology-based treatment and conversion methods. Recent advances in science and technological capabilities, especially those from the nascent discipline of systems biology, promise to accelerate and enhance this development. Resulting technologies will create a fundamentally new process and biorefinery paradigm that will enable an efficient and economic industry for converting plant biomass to liquid fuels. These key barriers and suggested research strategies to address them are described in this book.


Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction
Technical Strategy: Development of a Viable Cellulosic Biomass to Biofuel Industry
Systems Biology to Overcome Barriers to Cellulosic Ethanol
Feedstocks for Biofuels
Deconstructing Feedstocks to Sugars
Sugar Fermentation to Ethanol
Crosscutting 21st Century Science, Technology, and Infrastructure for a New Generation of Biofuel Research
Bioprocess Systems Engineering and Economic Analysis
Index
Go to:Top of Page