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Effect of Decorticating Sorghum on Ethanol Production and Composition of DDGS1

January 2006 Volume 83 Number 1
Pages 17 — 21
D. Y. Corredor , 2 S. R. Bean , 3 T. Schober , 2 and D. Wang 2 , 4

Contribution No. 05-225-J from Kansas State Agricultural Experiment Station, Manhattan, KS 66506. Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506. USDA-ARS Grain Marketing and Production Research Center, Manhattan, KS 66502. Names are necessary to report factually on available data; however, the USDA neither guarantees nor warrants the standard of the product, and the use of the name by the USDA implies no approval of the product to the exclusion of others that may also be suitable. Corresponding author. Phone: 785-532-2919. Fax: 785-532-5825. E-mail: dwang@ksu.edu


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Accepted August 23, 2005.
ABSTRACT

The use of a renewable biomass that contains considerable amounts of starch and cellulose could provide a sugar platform for the production of numerous bioproducts. Pretreatment technologies have been developed to increase the bioconversion rate for both starch and cellulosic-based biomass. This study investigated the effect of decortication as a pretreatment method on ethanol production from sorghum, as well as investigating its impact on quality of distillers' dry grains with solubles (DDGS). Eight sorghum hybrids with 0, 10, and 20% of their outer layers removed were used as raw materials for ethanol production. The decorticated samples were fermented to ethanol using Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Removal of germ and fiber before fermentation allowed for greater starch loading for ethanol fermentation and resulted in increased ethanol production. Ethanol yields increased as the percentage of decortication increased. The decortication process resulted in DDGS with higher protein content and lower fiber content, which may improve the feed quality.



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