04189oam 2200601I 450 991078813100332120230807210530.01-77463-550-X0-429-15254-X10.1201/b18460 (CKB)2670000000616274(EBL)2050808(SSID)ssj0001499574(PQKBManifestationID)12582639(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001499574(PQKBWorkID)11512485(PQKB)10806133(MiAaPQ)EBC2050808(OCoLC)908931916(EXLCZ)99267000000061627420180331h20152015 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrSugarcane as biofuel feedstock advances toward a sustainable energy solution /edited by Barnabas Gikonyo, PhDToronto :Apple Academic Press,[2015]©20151 online resource (336 p.)Description based upon print version of record.1-77188-129-1 1-4987-2883-9 Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters.Front Cover; About The Editor; Contents; Acknowledgment And How To Cite; List Of Contributors; Introduction; Part 1 Why Sugarcane?; Chapter 1 Sugarcane Biomass Production And Renewable Energy; Chapter 2 Evaluating The Composition And Processing Potential Of Novel Sources Of Brazilian Biomass For Sustainable Biorenewables Production; Part 2 Cultivation And Optimization Processes; Chapter 3 Towards The Production Of Second Generation Ethanol From Sugarcane Bagassein Brazil; Chapter 4 Obtaining New Cultures Of Microorganisms That Produces Cellulases And Xylanases From The Sugarcane BagasseChapter 5 Design And Optimization Of Ethanol Production From Bagasse Pith Hydrolysateby A Thermotolerant Yeast Kluyveromyces Sp. Iipe453 Using Response Surface MethodologyChapter 6 Ultra-structural Mapping Of Sugarcane Bagasse After Oxalic Acid Fiber Expansion (oafex) And Ethanol Production By Candida Shehatae And Saccharomyces Cerevisiae; Chapter 7 Combined Biological And Chemical Pretreatment Methodfor Lignocellulosic Ethanol Production From Energy Cane; Chapter 8 A Novel Promising Trichoderma Harzianum Strain For The Production Of A Cellulolytic Complex Using Sugarcane Bagasse In NaturaChapter 9 Conversion Of C6 And C5 Sugars In Undetoxified Wet Exploded Bagasse Hydrolysates Using Scheffersomyces (pichia) Stipitis Cbs6054Part 3 Economic And Environmental Factors; Chapter 10 Bioelectricity Versus Bioethanol From Sugarcane Bagasse: Is It Worth Being Flexible?; Chapter 11 Environmental Assessment Of Residues Generated After Consecutive Acid-base Pretreatment Of Sugarcane Bagasse By Advanced Oxidative Process; Part 4 Options For The Future; Chapter 12 Comparative Analysis Of Electricity Cogenerationscenarios In Sugarcane Production By LcaChapter 13 Techno-economic Comparison Of Ethanol And Electricity Coproduction Schemes From Sugarcane Residues At Existing Sugar Mills In Southern AfricaAuthor Notes; Back CoverAs the world's energy hunger grows ever larger, fossil fuel reserves are diminishing-and concerns about climate change remind us that our love affair with fossil fuels cannot continue much longer. This has inspired intense research into sustainable energy sources. Biofuels seemed initially promising, but the world soon realized that food-based biofuel has its own dangers. Second-generation biofuels, however, use biomass from crops' inedible parts-such as the stalks and leaves of sugarcane-offering a far more practical, sustainable, and commercially viable solution.In this book, researchers froSugarcaneEnergy cropsBiomass energySugarcane.Energy crops.Biomass energy.633.6/1Gikonyo BarnabasFlBoTFGFlBoTFGBOOK9910788131003321Sugarcane as biofuel feedstock3791282UNINA