This article provides a method to
convert landfill-designated municipal
solid waste (MSW, paper-rich and food-rich) to bioproducts through
integrated bioprocessing, also a way of improving the MSW diversion
rate to reduce environmental stress. Compositional analysis, bacterial
community profiling, homogenization, enzymatic hydrolysis, and yeast
fermentation were performed on the collected MSW samples. Results
show that these two types of MSW streams are potential feedstock sources
for biorefineries based on their abundance, carbohydrate composition,
and bioconversion yield. Addition of selected enzyme cocktails to
the homogenized substrates resulted in coproduction of C6/C5 sugars
and organic acids in the hydrolysates. Maximum 81% glucose and 100%
xylose yields were achieved in the paper-rich MSW-derived hydrolysate
(PDH). A glucose yield of 96.7% was obtained in the food-rich MSW-derived
hydrolysate (FDH). Sugars in PDH and FDH were readily fermentable
without detoxification and solid separation. Preliminary fermentation
attained 17.7 g/L ethanol from the PDH (69.4% theoretical yield) and
8.9 g/L ethanol from FDH (70.3% theoretical yield), respectively,
both comparable with the Avicel-derived hydrolysate (67.6% theoretical
yield) used as the control.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.