University researchers raise a toast to biofuel prospects
Craft brewing has increased in popularity in recent years with the corresponding increase in waste by-products - 85% of which is grain. The spent grain byproduct is roughly 30% protein and 70% fibre.
Traditionally, the spent grain is sold off as cattle feed, or dumped in landfills. However, with 30% protein researchers believe there are biofuel opportunities.
“Spent grain has a very high percentage of protein compared to other agricultural waste, so our goal was to find a novel way to extract and use it,” said Yanhong He, a graduate student at Virginia Polytechnic and State University, or Virginia Tech.
Haibo Huang, the project’s principal investigator, and He developed a wet milling fractionation process that allowed them to recapture up to 83% of the spent grain’s protein. By eliminating the high-fibre content, the protein concentrate can be used as a food source.
There is also hope of taking the fibre-rich waste and turning it into biofuel.
They said the research was a promising development for the brewing industry and one that could have far-reaching impact on the biofuel industry as well.