Cover page
Title page
Certification
Dedication
Acknowledgement
Abstract
Organization of the work
Table of Contents
Chapter ONE
1.0 Introduction
1.1 Historical development
1.2 Aim and objective
1.3 Statements of problems
1.4 Hypothesis
1.5 Justifications
1.6 Limitations
Chapter TWO
Literature Review
2.0 Method of ethanol production
2.1 Gelatimazation and saccharification
2.2 Enzymatic hydrolysis method
2.3 Acid hydrolysis method
2.4 Alcoholic fermentation
2.5 By product of alcoholic fermentation
2.6 Separation of by product
2.7 Biochemistry and mechanism of sugar fermentation
2.8 Rectification and production of absolute alcohol.
Chapter THREE
3.0 Materials and methods
3.1 Extraction of starch from cassava
3.2 Preparation of malt powder
3.3 Mashing
3.4 Test for reducing sugar
3.5 Quantitative test for sugar using benedict solution
3.6 Preparation of yeast inoculums
3.7 Preparation of fermentation medium
3.8 Distillation of ethanol from fermented worth.
Chapter FOUR
Result and Discussion
Chapter FIVE
Conclusion and recommendation
References
Project Overview
CHAPTER ONE
1.0 INTRODUCTION
Ethanol
is produced commercially by chemical synthesis and fermentation.
Practically all industrial s ethanol is manufactured synthetically from
petroleum and natural gas while all beverage alcohol is produced by
fermentation of cereal grains molasses, potatoes and other materials
with high starch and sugar contents.
Potentials sources of production of alcohol in Nigeria include millet,
yam, sorghum, corn, cocoyam and cassava. Cassava tuber
(manihot esculenta)
is the most potential candidate by virtue of the fact that this crop
can be grown with low level of management and also varieties for
industrials production and presence of high yielding cultivars.
Cassava
(manihot esculenta) also called manioc of the spurge family
(Euphorbiaceous) is native from South Africa but is now cultivated in
most tropical and subtropical regions. It is a shrubby prennial about
9ft high and has terminal starchy tuberous root. The root contain
prussic acid and some are quite poisonous but heat expels the volatile
acid and render the materials harmless.
The
hydrolysis of cassava and utilization of an efficient low cost
saccharifying agent are factors of paramount importance in the
production of food or alcohol from cassava starch since this
polysaccharide must be broken down into fermentation sugar which can be
utilized by the micro- organisms.
The
amylolytic enzymes used in the biological saccharification can be
obtained from several sources. These include COM, and barley malt and
the surface and submerged fungal and bacteria culture processes.
The
breakdown of geletimized starch occur via the hydrolysis of the - 1.4
linkages which from the glucose molecules and also via the hydrolysis of
- 1,6 amylopectin component of starch. Malt contain the three most
important enzymes for the starch breakdown - amylase. B - amylase and
amyloglicosidase.
Ethanol
(ethyl alcohol) is produced by the anaerobic fermentation of the
saccharified starch (reducing sugar) by yeast via the embden - meyerhoff
- parnas (EMP) pathway of anaerobic fermentation.
Saccharomyces cerevisae was
chosen for such characteristics as their ability to ferment rapidly and
to tolerate higher ethanol concentration and to flocculate easily.

C6H12O6 2C2H5OH +2CO2
(aq) (aq) (g)
Ethyl alcohol is colorless, volatile liguid, which is flammable and toxic and has a punger taste. It boils 78.4oc and melts at -112. 3oc, has a specific gravity of 0.7851 at 20oc and insoluble in water and most organic liquid. The general formula of ethanol is CNH2NHOH.
1.1 HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF ETHANOL
The
name -alcohol†is a generic name derived from two Arabic words, al and
koli which were used to described a finely ground powder used by
oriental women to darken their eye brow. The name was generally
restricted to alcohol spirits of wine rectified to the highest -degreeâ€.
Ethyl alcohol is of course extremely well known as a constituent of
alcohols beverage distilled; beer, wine. The world alcohol unqualified
is often used to refer to ethyl alcohol.
As a beverage, it has been produced and utilized unknowingly as far back as 4000 year ago by the pharoalis in Egypt.
An
indication of the antiquity of the knowledge of the effect of ethyl
alcohol has been traced to Noah, who built for himself a vineyard and
grew which he fermented into a sort of alcohols beverage on which he
become drunk with unfortunate result to his respectability. Other
(1967).
Williams
and Lansford described alcoholic fermentation as the process by which
certain micro- organism, particularly strains of yeast convert sugar to a
mixture of ethanol (ethyl alcohols) and carbon dioxide.
The
term fermentation (Latin fermentation to boil) was used to describe the
appearance of boiling due to evolution of gas caused by microbiological
reactions. The micro-organism were originally named organized ferments
to distinguish them from unorganized ferments that had been extracted
from plants and animals.
The
term enzyme (Greek en, in, zypee. Yeast) came into general use after
sometime and soon displaced the term ferment. Fermentation has come to
mean enzymatic action other than those involving oxygen. The alcoholic
fermentation of sugars was almost certainly discovered by accident,
probably as a result of some cereal infusion becoming infested with
yeasts and other micro - organisms. The discover is thought to have
taken place well over ten thousand year ago among the ancient
civilization inhabiting in nice valley.
The
most ambitions step so far taken is in Brazil, which is the highest
probably and most advanced in the world and it aims at having ethanol
from came.
The
ethanol produced by alcoholic fermentation is responsible for much of
the desired potency in an alcoholic beverage but of the more subtle
quantities of taste and aroma are caused by quantitatively mirror
product of
the yeast fermentation particularly higher alcohols and esters of these alcohols.
1.2 AIMS AND OBJECTIVE OF THE PROJECT
This project is general at investigating the possibilities of using cassava
manihot eseculenta a local raw materials as a chief stock to produce ethanol which are industrically and humanly useful.
1.3 STATEMENT OF PROBLEMS
The
problems, which arise as a result of high cost of importation and harsh
economic situation in the country, it becomes imperative to search for
local raw materials to replace the imported ethanol by using cassava,
which yield high quality of starch for the production of alcohol.
1.4 HYPOTHESIS
Ho Effect of prussic acid and cyanogenic acid present in cassava.
H1
there is no effect of the prussive and cyanogenic acid in the ethanol
production because during the process of heating, the volatile acids
escaped out and therefore the materials becomes harmless.
1.5 JUSTIFICATION
At
present there is no commercial production of alcohols from cassava in
Nigeria. Huge amount of money are being spent to import ethanol for
medical pharmaceutical, research and industries. It will be economically
useful if government imitate a move towards the direction of producing
ethanol from our local raw materials (cassava).