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Dive into the research topics where Barbara R. Evans is active.

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Featured researches published by Barbara R. Evans.


PLOS ONE | 2007

High-yield hydrogen production from starch and water by a synthetic enzymatic pathway.

Y.-H. Percival Zhang; Barbara R. Evans; Jonathan R. Mielenz; Robert C. Hopkins; Michael W. W. Adams

Background The future hydrogen economy offers a compelling energy vision, but there are four main obstacles: hydrogen production, storage, and distribution, as well as fuel cells. Hydrogen production from inexpensive abundant renewable biomass can produce cheaper hydrogen, decrease reliance on fossil fuels, and achieve zero net greenhouse gas emissions, but current chemical and biological means suffer from low hydrogen yields and/or severe reaction conditions. Methodology/Principal Findings Here we demonstrate a synthetic enzymatic pathway consisting of 13 enzymes for producing hydrogen from starch and water. The stoichiometric reaction is C6H10O5 (l)+7 H2O (l)→12 H2 (g)+6 CO2 (g). The overall process is spontaneous and unidirectional because of a negative Gibbs free energy and separation of the gaseous products with the aqueous reactants. Conclusions Enzymatic hydrogen production from starch and water mediated by 13 enzymes occurred at 30°C as expected, and the hydrogen yields were much higher than the theoretical limit (4 H2/glucose) of anaerobic fermentations. Significance The unique features, such as mild reaction conditions (30°C and atmospheric pressure), high hydrogen yields, likely low production costs (


Environmental Science & Technology | 2010

Characterization of Biochars Produced from Cornstovers for Soil Amendment

James W. Lee; Michelle Kidder; Barbara R. Evans; Sokwon Paik; A. C. Buchanan; Charles T. Garten; Robert C. Brown

∼2/kg H2), and a high energy-density carrier starch (14.8 H2-based mass%), provide great potential for mobile applications. With technology improvements and integration with fuel cells, this technology also solves the challenges associated with hydrogen storage, distribution, and infrastructure in the hydrogen economy.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2003

Palladium-bacterial cellulose membranes for fuel cells

Barbara R. Evans; Hugh O'Neill; Valerie P. Malyvanh; Ida Lee; Jonathan Woodward

Through cation exchange capacity assay, nitrogen adsorption-desorption surface area measurements, scanning electron microscopic imaging, infrared spectra and elemental analyses, we characterized biochar materials produced from cornstover under two different pyrolysis conditions, fast pyrolysis at 450 °C and gasification at 700 °C. Our experimental results showed that the cation exchange capacity (CEC) of the fast-pyrolytic char is about twice as high as that of the gasification char as well as that of a standard soil sample. The CEC values correlate well with the increase in the ratios of the oxygen atoms to the carbon atoms (O:C ratios) in the biochar materials. The higher O:C ratio was consistent with the presence of more hydroxyl, carboxylate, and carbonyl groups in the fast pyrolysis char. These results show how control of biomass pyrolysis conditions can improve biochar properties for soil amendment and carbon sequestration. Since the CEC of the fast-pyrolytic cornstover char can be about double that of a standard soil sample, this type of biochar products would be suitable for improvement of soil properties such as CEC, and at the same time, can serve as a carbon sequestration agent.


Chemsuschem | 2009

Spontaneous High-Yield Production of Hydrogen from Cellulosic Materials and Water Catalyzed by Enzyme Cocktails

Xinhao Ye; Yiran Wang; Robert C. Hopkins; Michael W. W. Adams; Barbara R. Evans; Jonathan R. Mielenz; Y.-H. Percival Zhang

Bacterial cellulose is a versatile renewable biomaterial that can be used as a hydrophilic matrix for the incorporation of metals into thin, flexible, thermally stable membranes. In contrast to plant cellulose, we found it catalyzed the deposition of metals within its structure to generate a finely divided homogeneous catalyst layer. Experimental data suggested that bacterial cellulose possessed reducing groups capable of initiating the precipitation of palladium, gold, and silver from aqueous solution. Since the bacterial cellulose contained water equivalent to at least 200 times the dry weight of the cellulose, it was dried to a thin membranous structure suitable for the construction of membrane electrode assemblies (MEAs). Results of our study with palladium-cellulose showed that it was capable of catalyzing the generation of hydrogen when incubated with sodium dithionite and generated an electrical current from hydrogen in an MEA containing native cellulose as the polyelectrolyte membrane (PEM). Advantages of using native and metallized bacterial cellulose membranes in an MEA over other PEMs such as Nafion 117 include its higher thermal stability to 130 degrees C and lower gas crossover.


Ultramicroscopy | 2000

The mechanism of cellulase action on cotton fibers: evidence from atomic force microscopy

Ida Lee; Barbara R. Evans; Jonathan Woodward

Cocktail reception: Biohydrogen is produced in high yield from cellulosic materials and water in a one-pot process catalyzed by up to 14 enzymes and one coenzyme. This assembly of enzymes results in non-natural catabolic pathways. These spontaneous reactions are conducted under modest reaction conditions (32 degrees C and atmospheric pressure).


Biomacromolecules | 2010

Breakdown of Cell Wall Nanostructure in Dilute Acid Pretreated Biomass

Sai Venkatesh Pingali; Volker S. Urban; William T. Heller; Joseph McGaughey; Hugh O'Neill; Marcus Foston; Dean A. A. Myles; Arthur J. Ragauskas; Barbara R. Evans

Two cellulases from Trichoderma reesei--an exoglucanase, CBH I, and an endoglucanase, EG II--alone and in combination were incubated with cotton fibers. The effects of the cellulases on the surfaces of the cotton fibers were examined by atomic force microscopy. At high magnification, the physical effects on the fibers caused by the two types of enzymes were considerably different. Treatment with CBH I resulted in the appearance of distinct pathways or tracks along the length of the macrofibril. Treatment with EG II appeared to cause peeling and smoothing of the fiber surface. In combination, their effect was observed to be greatest when both enzymes were present simultaneously. When fibers smoothed by treatment with EG II were treated subsequently with CBH I, further evidence of path way formation caused by the action of CBH I along the fibers was observed. Incubation with a cellulase from Thermotoga maritima that lacks a cellulose binding domain had no effect on the surface of cotton fibers. These images provide the first physical evidence of differences in the effect of cellulase components action on the surface of cotton fibers and provide evidence for the movement or tracking of CBH I along the fibers. The first AFM image of CBH I molecules are presented.


Green Chemistry | 2014

Common processes drive the thermochemical pretreatment of lignocellulosic biomass

Paul Langan; Loukas Petridis; Hugh O'Neill; Sai Venkatesh Pingali; Marcus Foston; Yoshiharu Nishiyama; Roland Schulz; Benjamin Lindner; B. Leif Hanson; Shane E. Harton; William T. Heller; Volker S. Urban; Barbara R. Evans; S. Gnanakaran; Arthur J. Ragauskas; Jeremy C. Smith; Brian H. Davison

The generation of bioethanol from lignocellulosic biomass holds great promise for renewable and clean energy production. A better understanding of the complex mechanisms of lignocellulose breakdown during various pretreatment methods is needed to realize this potential in a cost and energy efficient way. Here we use small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) to characterize morphological changes in switchgrass lignocellulose across molecular to submicrometer length scales resulting from the industrially relevant dilute acid pretreatment method. Our results demonstrate that dilute acid pretreatment increases the cross-sectional radius of the crystalline cellulose fibril. This change is accompanied by removal of hemicellulose and the formation of R(g) ∼ 135 A lignin aggregates. The structural signature of smooth cell wall surfaces is observed at length scales larger than 1000 A, and it remains remarkably invariable during pretreatment. This study elucidates the interplay of the different biomolecular components in the breakdown process of switchgrass by dilute acid pretreatment. The results are important for the development of efficient strategies of biomass to biofuel conversion.


Letters in Applied Microbiology | 2007

Statistical analysis of optimal culture conditions for Gluconacetobacter hansenii cellulose production

Stacy A. Hutchens; R. V. Leon; Hugh O'Neill; Barbara R. Evans

Lignocellulosic biomass, a potentially important renewable organic source of energy and chemical feedstock, resists degradation to glucose in industrial hydrolysis processes and thus requires expensive thermochemical pretreatments. Understanding the mechanism of biomass breakdown during these pretreatments will lead to more efficient use of biomass. By combining multiple probes of structure, sensitive to different length scales, with molecular dynamics simulations, we reveal two fundamental processes responsible for the morphological changes in biomass during steam explosion pretreatment: cellulose dehydration and lignin-hemicellulose phase separation. We further show that the basic driving forces are the same in other leading thermochemical pretreatments, such as dilute acid pretreatment and ammonia fiber expansion.


Carbohydrate Research | 2013

The effect of deuteration on the structure of bacterial cellulose

Garima Bali; Marcus Foston; Hugh O’Neill; Barbara R. Evans; Junhong He; Arthur J. Ragauskas

Aim:  The purpose of this study was to analyse the effects of different culture parameters on Gluconacetobacter hansenii (ATCC 10821) to determine which conditions provided optimum cellulose growth.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Small-angle neutron scattering reveals pH-dependent conformational changes in trichoderma reesei cellobiohydrolase I: Implications for enzymatic activity

Sai Venkatesh Pingali; Hugh O'Neill; Joseph McGaughey; Volker S. Urban; Caroline S Rempe; Loukas Petridis; Jeremy C. Smith; Barbara R. Evans; William T. Heller

In vivo generated deuterated bacterial cellulose, cultivated from 100% deuterated glycerol in D2O medium, was analyzed for deuterium incorporation by ionic liquid dissolution and (2)H and (1)H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). A solution NMR method of the dissolved cellulose was used to determine that this bacterial cellulose had 85% deuterium incorporation. Acetylation and (1)H and (2)H NMR of deuterated bacterial cellulose indicated near equal deuteration at all sites of the glucopyranosyl ring except C-6 which was partly deuterated. Despite the high level of deuterium incorporation no significant differences in the molecular and morphological properties were observed for the deuterated and protio bacterial cellulose samples. The highly deuterated bacterial cellulose presented here can be used as a model substrate for studying cellulose biopolymer properties via future small angle neutron scattering (SANS) studies.

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Hugh O'Neill

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Jonathan Woodward

United States Department of Energy

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Arthur J. Ragauskas

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Brian H. Davison

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Elias Greenbaum

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Hugh O’Neill

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Marcus Foston

Washington University in St. Louis

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Sai Venkatesh Pingali

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Volker S. Urban

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Ida Lee

University of Tennessee

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