skip to main content
OSTI.GOV title logo U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Title: Physical fractionation of sweet sorghum and forage/energy sorghum for optimal processing in a biorefinery

Journal Article · · Industrial Crops and Products
 [1];  [2];  [1];  [1];  [3];  [1];  [4]; ORCiD logo [5]
  1. Michigan State Univ., East Lansing, MI (United States)
  2. Huaiyin Normal University (China)
  3. Montana State Univ., Bozeman, MT (United States)
  4. Michigan State Univ., East Lansing, MI (United States) ; Texas A & M Univ., College Station, TX (United States)
  5. Montana State Univ., Bozeman, MT (United States); Luleå University of Technology (Sweden)

Sorghum offers great potential as a feedstock for the production of fuels and chemicals from both water-extractable sugars and the cell wall biopolymers, while its within-plant structural and compositional heterogeneity may allow for physical fractionations to tailor feedstock properties to a biorefining process. In this study, the stem internodes of two sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L. Moench) genotypes, a sweet sorghum (‘Della’) and a forage/energy sorghum (‘TX08001’), were first subjected to fractionation by manual classification by stem anatomy and internode proximity to the ground to yield 18 fractions. These fractions exhibited substantial differences in cell wall morphology, composition, and recalcitrance to mild alkaline pretreatment and enzymatic hydrolysis. While the sweet sorghum cultivar held nearly 70% more water-extractable sugar (sucrose, glucose, fructose, starch) in the stems than the forage/energy sorghum hybrid, both cultivars exhibited comparable diversity of composition and these compositions were remarkably similar in similar tissues and stem regions between the two cultivars. The fractions isolated from the pith parenchyma were the least recalcitrant to mild alkaline pretreatment and enzymatic hydrolysis and contained less lignin than fractions isolated from the epidermis, outer and inner rind, and internal vascular bundles. The pith samples isolated from the lowest region of the stem from both cultivars exhibited near-theoretical sugar hydrolysis yields when no pretreatment was employed and exhibited the lowest lignin contents of any of the fractions. Next, a physical fractionation approach approximating a commercial “de-pithing” process utilizing wet disintegration and sieving was applied to the forage/energy sorghum. A pith-rich fraction representing approximately 20% of the extractives-free mass of the stem could be isolated with this approach and, relative to the other fractions, was low in lignin, high in ash, highly hygroscopic, and showed an improved response to mild alkaline pretreatment and enzymatic hydrolysis at low enzyme loadings. Overall, these results demonstrate how heterogeneity within sorghum stems can be exploited using physical fractionation approaches to yield fractions enriched in desired properties that may allow for more streamlined processing.

Research Organization:
Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison, WI (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Science (SC)
Grant/Contract Number:
FC02-07ER64494; BER DE-FC02-07ER64494
OSTI ID:
1609232
Alternate ID(s):
OSTI ID: 1702815
Journal Information:
Industrial Crops and Products, Vol. 124, Issue C; ISSN 0926-6690
Publisher:
ElsevierCopyright Statement
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English
Citation Metrics:
Cited by: 14 works
Citation information provided by
Web of Science

References (41)

Energy Sorghum--a genetic model for the design of C4 grass bioenergy crops journal June 2014
A sober view of the difficulties in scaling cellulosic biofuels journal January 2017
Cell-wall properties contributing to improved deconstruction by alkaline pre-treatment and enzymatic hydrolysis in diverse maize ( Zea mays L.) lines journal February 2015
UV-induced blue-green and far-red fluorescence along wheat leaves: a potential signature of leaf ageing journal February 2003
Evaluation of a simple alkaline pretreatment for screening of sugarcane hybrids according to their in vitro digestibility journal November 2013
Energy sorghum hybrids: Functional dynamics of high nitrogen use efficiency journal September 2013
Transcriptional and Metabolic Analysis of Senescence Induced by Preventing Pollination in Maize journal June 2012
Maize Stem Tissues journal January 2006
Dynamics of biomass partitioning, stem gene expression, cell wall biosynthesis, and sucrose accumulation during development of Sorghum bicolor journal September 2016
New Commercially Viable Processing Technologies for the Production of Sugar Feedstocks from Sweet Sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L. Moench) for Manufacture of Biofuels and Bioproducts journal June 2013
Composition of sugar cane, energy cane, and sweet sorghum suitable for ethanol production at Louisiana sugar mills journal August 2010
Composition of cell walls isolated from cell types of grain sorghum stems journal May 1999
Impact of hydrothermal pre-treatment to chemical composition, enzymatic digestibility and spatial distribution of cell wall polymers journal June 2013
Relating Nanoscale Accessibility within Plant Cell Walls to Improved Enzyme Hydrolysis Yields in Corn Stover Subjected to Diverse Pretreatments journal September 2017
Identification of developmental stage and anatomical fraction contributions to cell wall recalcitrance in switchgrass journal July 2017
Designing sorghum as a dedicated bioenergy feedstock journal October 2007
Changes with maturity in anatomy, histochemistry, chemistry, and tissue digestibility of bermudagrass plant parts journal January 1977
Low temperature alkali pretreatment for improving enzymatic digestibility of sweet sorghum bagasse for ethanol production journal April 2011
Topochemical distribution of lignin and hydroxycinnamic acids in sugar-cane cell walls and its correlation with the enzymatic hydrolysis of polysaccharides journal January 2011
Temporal and Spatial Regulation of Sucrose Accumulation in the Sugarcane Stem journal January 1995
Morphological and Chemical Composition of Pith and Fibers from Mexican Sugarcane Bagasse journal December 2001
Sugarcane for bioenergy production: an assessment of yield and regulation of sucrose content journal April 2010
Sweet sorghum as a model system for bioenergy crops journal June 2012
Yield Results and Stability Analysis from the Sorghum Regional Biomass Feedstock Trial journal March 2014
Structure and composition of sweet sorghum stalk components journal August 1997
Plant cell wall aromatics: influence on degradation of biomass journal July 2008
High biomass yield energy sorghum: developing a genetic model for C4 grass bioenergy crops: Modeling and Analysis: Developing a genetic model for C4 grass bioenergy crops journal September 2012
Bio-Fuel Crops Research for Energy Security and Rural Development in Developing Countries journal October 2008
Mechanical dissociation and fragmentation of lignocellulosic biomass: Effect of initial moisture, biochemical and structural proprieties on energy requirement journal March 2015
Characterization of cell wall components of wheat straw following hydrothermal pretreatment and fractionation journal March 2013
Effects of enzymatic removal of plant cell wall acylation (acetylation, p-coumaroylation, and feruloylation) on accessibility of cellulose and xylan in natural (non-pretreated) sugar cane fractions journal October 2014
Water sorption in pretreated grasses as a predictor of enzymatic hydrolysis yields journal December 2017
Characteristics of plant cell walls affecting intake and digestibility of forages by ruminants. journal January 1995
Isolates of cell types from sorghum stems: Digestion, cell wall and anatomical characteristics journal January 1993
Erratum to: Cell Wall Composition and Ruminant Digestibility of Various Maize Tissues Across Development journal July 2010
Soluble and insoluble solids contributions to high-solids enzymatic hydrolysis of lignocellulose journal December 2008
Tissue-Specific Cell Wall Hydration in Sugarcane Stalks journal June 2013
Impacts of delignification and hot water pretreatment on the water induced cell wall swelling behavior of grasses and its relation to cellulolytic enzyme hydrolysis and binding journal December 2013
The enzymatic recalcitrance of internodes of sugar cane hybrids with contrasting lignin contents journal November 2013
Dynamics of gene expression during development and expansion of vegetative stem internodes of bioenergy sorghum journal June 2017
Spatial gradients in cell wall composition and transcriptional profiles along elongating maize internodes journal January 2014