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Carbohydrate fermentation starch

One of the more recent innovative approaches was to look for new micro-organisms and novel carbohydrate substrates. The early fermentations used sugar beet or cane molasses, various syrups, sweet potato starch or glucose itself and the micro-organism was always an Aspergillus spp. In the early 1930 s it was found that yeasts would produce dtric add from acetate. Since then a variety of yeasts, prindpally Candida spp., has been shown to convert glucose, w-alkanes or ethanol to dtric add with great effidency. [Pg.126]

Several carbohydrates such as corn and potato starch, molasses and whey can be used to produce lactic acid. Starch must fust be hydrolysed to glucose by enzymatic hydrolysis then fermentation is performed in the second stage. The choice of carbohydrate material depends upon its availability, and pretreatment is required before fermentation. We shall describe the bioprocess for the production of lactic acid from whey. [Pg.6]

Fermenting grains with yeast produces a grain alcohol. The process also works with other biomass feedstocks. In fermentation, the yeast decomposes carbohydrates which are starches in grains, or sugar from sugar cane juice into ethyl alcohol (ethanol) and carbon dioxide. The process breaks down complex substances into simpler ones. [Pg.93]

Wheat grain, legumes Colon cancer Contains digestion-resistant starch and other non-digestible carbohydrates which increase fermentation in colon and hence production of volatile fatty acids... [Pg.359]

More than seventy years ago the impressive discovery was made that bioreduction of mannitol, glycerol and starch yields butanol. Fermentations in which butyric acid, butanol and acetone are formed from carbohydrates by different bacilli (butyl bacteria) belong in this group. The term butyl bacteria as a generic name for microbes producing the genetically related substances of the four-carbon series was proposed in 1921" and has been applied since then. The approximate course of these reactions is shown by the following formulations which, however, do not explain the mechanism ... [Pg.107]


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