Illinois Data Bank

Data for Impact of Non-Irrigation on 1G and 2G Bioethanol Potential of Oilcane Feedstock: A Field to Fuel Pipeline Study

This study evaluates the bioethanol potential in response to irrigation (IR) and non-irrigation (NIR) of oilcane (OC) during a seasonal drought prior harvest. The juice was extracted through mechanical pressing of stems and fermented by Ethanol Red® yeast to produce first-generation bioethanol. Hydrothermal pretreatment followed by enzymatic hydrolysis of bagasse was performed to produce monomeric sugars from structural carbohydrates. The hydrolysates were fermented with engineered yeast for second-generation bioethanol production. The irrigated oilcane juice (276.3 ± 8.9 g/L) constitutes higher sugar concentrations than non-irrigated oilcane juice (236.5 ± 2.2 g/L). The enzymatic hydrolysis of IR-OC and NIR-OC pretreated bagasse yielded similar concentrations of 247.5 ± 2.22 and 249.7 ± 4.98 g/L fermentable sugars. Industry-relevant bioethanol titers of ≥99 g/L and ≥75 g/L were achieved from juice and hydrolysates, respectively. Therefore, the non-irrigation regime did not impact the 1G and 2G bioethanol titers. However, the overall bioethanol yield can be lower due to the reduction of stem yield (8 %) per hectare.

Life Sciences
Conversion;Feedstock Production;Biomass Analytics;Feedstock Bioprocessing;Oilcane;Sugar Accumulation
CC BY
U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)-Grant:DE-SC0018420
Vijay Singh
Version DOI Comment Publication Date
1 10.13012/B2IDB-6728019_V1 2025-11-21

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