Biomass & Bioenergy, Vol.47, 354-361, 2012
Enzymatic saccharification of duckweed (Lemna minor) biomass without thermophysical pretreatment
Duckweed is a rapidly replicating aquatic plant that has the potential to decontaminate effluent streams from food processing and also has a low-lignin content. Hence it could provide a more suitable source of cellulose for conversion to biofuels. This paper reports that duckweed biomass has the potential to be enzymatically saccharifled to produce glucose and other cell-wall-derived sugars which might be converted to ethanol by fermentation or exploited as industrial platform chemicals. The enzymatic digestibility has been studied on alcohol-extracted, water-insoluble preparations of duckweed cell walls. Within these, glucose accounts for w = 25.4% (dry wt), which has arisen from cellulose and non-cellulosic glucans including starch. Several commercial cell-wall degrading enzymes and cocktails have been evaluated. Saccharification can be achieved within about 8 h using commercial cellulase at 4.35 FPU g(-1) substrate in conjunction with added beta-glucosidase at 100 U g(-1) substrate. The potential for exploiting duckweed is discussed. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.