2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.envdev.2015.03.004
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Sugarcane processing for ethanol and sugar in Brazil

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Cited by 206 publications
(103 citation statements)
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References 43 publications
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“…Bagasse is by-product of sugar industry obtained after the extraction process. This by-product was used in different processes such as fuel resources [8] which sugarcane bagasse is burnt in the boiler, producing steam that is expanded in turbines coupled with electric generators [9] and silica source [10]. Bagasse ash is a general term describing all forms of the ash produced from burning bagasse.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bagasse is by-product of sugar industry obtained after the extraction process. This by-product was used in different processes such as fuel resources [8] which sugarcane bagasse is burnt in the boiler, producing steam that is expanded in turbines coupled with electric generators [9] and silica source [10]. Bagasse ash is a general term describing all forms of the ash produced from burning bagasse.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to Dias et al (2015Dias et al ( , 2011, sugarcane is transported from the field to the plant and prepared for juice extraction by milling. After extraction, impurities (minerals, salts, organic acids, dirt and fine fiber particles) are removed from sugarcane juice in the juice treatment system by a physicochemical treatment.…”
Section: Bioethanol Produced From Sugarcanementioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been used as feedstock for production of ethanol on a large scale basis in Brazil for over three decades. Apart from ethanol, most of the sugarcane mills produce sugar and electricity (DIAS et al, 2015). Sugarcane trash, such as bagasse and leaves fuels the cane processing plants, providing electricity to the grids through cogeneration.…”
Section: Ligninmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Nos dois casos, a fonte de açúcar fermentecível é de fácil obtenção: sacarose do caldo de cana e glicose a partir da hidrólise enzimática do amido contido no milho. Por outro lado, existe uma expectativa atual de que a próxima geração de biocombustíveis (denominados de segunda geração) seja produzida a partir de rejeitos agrícolas e/ou florestais (biomassa lignocelulósica), maximizando o uso da área plantada e ampliando o número de países envolvidos na produção de biocombustíveis (DIAS et al, 2015). No entanto, o processamento da biomassa lignocelulósica para a produção de etanol de segunda geração é mais complexo e requer a conversão eficiente de seus polissacarídeos a monômeros fermentescíveis (HARRIS et al, 2014 …”
Section: Introductionunclassified