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High-value chemicals produced from ethanol feedstocks could boost biorefinery economics
September 11, 2006
Biorefineries developed to produce ethanol from cellulose sources such as trees and fast-growing plants could get a significant economic boost from the sale of high-value chemicals - such as vanillin flavoring - that could be generated from the same feedstock. Revenue from these "side stream" chemicals could help make ethanol produced by biorefineries cost competitive with traditional fossil fuels. At the 232nd national meeting of the American Chemical Society, a researcher from the Georgia Institute of Technology will describe green chemical processes that could produce chemicals worth up to $25 per pound from the same feedstock used to produce ethanol. The presentation will be part of a session "Green Chemistry for Fuel Synthesis and Processing" held Sunday, September 10.
"It seems unlikely that fuel from a biorefinery - at least in the beginning - is going to be as cost-effective as fuel from traditional fossil sources," said Charles Eckert, a professor in the Georgia Tech School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering. "To make the biorefinery sustainable, we must therefore do everything we can to help the economics. If we can take a chemical stream worth only cents per pound and turn it into chemicals worth many dollars per pound, this could help make the biorefinery cost effective."
To help make that happen, Eckert and collaborators Charles Liotta, Arthur Ragauskas, Jason Hallett, Christopher Kitchens, Elizabeth Hill and Laura Draucker are exploring the use of three environmentally-friendly solvent and separation systems - gas-expanded liquids, supercritical fluids and near-critical water - to produce specialty chemicals, pharmaceutical precursors and flavorings from a small portion of the ethanol feedstock.
"These are novel feedstocks for chemical production," Eckert noted. "They are very different from what we've dealt with before. This gives us different challenges, and provides a rich area for interdisciplinary research."
Using near-critical water and gas-expanded liquids, Eckert and his colleagues have already demonstrated the production of vanillin, syringol and syringaldehyde from a paper mill black liquor side stream. They have also proposed a process that would generate levulinic acid, glucaric acid and other chemicals from the pre-pulping of wood chips. That process would use an alcohol-carbon dioxide mixture, followed by depolymerization and dehydration in near-critical water. Research aimed at producing high-value products from cellulose feedstocks is being done through the "AtlantIC Alliance," a coalition of three research institutions in the United States and the United Kingdom. The alliance, which includes Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Imperial College and Georgia Tech, seeks to solve the complex issues involved in economically producing ethanol fuel from cellulose materials such as wood chips, sawgrass, corn stovers - and even municipal waste.
"The feedstock would likely be different in different geographic locations, depending on what was readily available," Eckert noted. "In the Southeast, we have abundant forest resources. In the West, sources would include sawgrass, corn stovers and similar plant materials. In the United Kingdom, there is strong interest in producing fuels from municipal wastes."
The Alliance is taking a comprehensive approach to the biorefinery, conducting studies of how to maximize plant growth through genetic engineering, developing new microbial techniques for digesting cellulose, and applying environmentally-friendly chemical processes for reactions and separations. The organizers decided to pursue only non-food sources as their feedstock.
Using tunable solvent systems in the biorefinery would avoid the generation of wastes associated with processes that depend on strong acids - which must be neutralized at the end of the reaction.
For instance, near-critical water - familiar H2O but at 250 to 300 degrees Celsius under pressure - separates into acid and base components that can be used to dissolve both organic and inorganic chemicals. When the pressure is removed, the water returns to its normal properties.
Gas-expanded liquids, such as carbon dioxide in methanol, provide a flexible solvent whose properties can be adjusted by changing the pressure. When the reaction is over, the pressure is released, allowing the carbon dioxide to separate from the methanol.
Supercritical fluids, such as carbon dioxide under high pressure, simplify separation processes. Separation of the carbon dioxide from chemicals dissolved in it requires only that the pressure be reduced, allowing the CO2 to return to its gaseous state.
Though many challenges remain before biorefineries can be designed and built, Eckert says it is important to invest now in this renewable source of energy and chemicals.
"To make the biorefinery work will require a major effort that must be well coordinated among everybody working on it," he said. "The biorefinery is one of several answers that we need to pursue as part of a national energy strategy. Our future economic well-being requires us to deal with the energy issue."
Georgia Institute of Technology Research News
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Biorefineries - Industrial Processes and Products: Status Quo and Future Directions (2 Volume Set) (v. 1)
by Birgit Kamm (Editor), Patrick R. Gruber (Editor), Michael Kamm (Editor)
This is the first book dedicated to biorefineries and biobased industrial technologies, and, as such, is directed towards the technological principles of biorefineries, green processes, plants, concepts, current and forthcoming biobased product lines, as well as the economic aspects. Since the hot topics of green chemistry and green processes are of a multidisciplinary interest, this book will benefit the whole spectrum of the process industry, including chemical engineers, process engineers, apparatus construction engineers, chemical industry, chemists in industry, and biotechnologists. The editors and authors are all internationally recognized experts from industry and academia, including Dr. Patrick Gruber, the former Vice President and Chief Technology Officer of Cargill Dow, a...
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Biorefineries: For Biomass Upgrading Facilities (Green Energy and Technology)
by Ayhan Demirbas (Author)
Industrial biorefineries have been identified as the most promising routes to the creation of a bio-based economy. Partial biorefineries already exist in some energy crop, forest-based, and lignocellulosic product facilities. Biorefineries: For Biomass Upgrading Facilities examines the variety of different technologies which integrated bio-based industries use to produce chemicals; biofuels; food and feed ingredients; biomaterials; and power from biomass raw materials. These systems can be improved through better utilization of agricultural residues and solid wastes, and through the optimization of total value-added products. Conversion technologies are also covered, since biomass can be converted into useful biofuels and biochemicals via biomass upgrading and biorefinery...
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Sustainable Ethanol: Biofuels, Biorefineries, Cellulosic Biomass, Flex-fuel Vehicles, and Sustainable Farming for Energy Independence
by Jeffrey Goettemoeller (Author), Adrian Goettemoeller (Author)
Sustainable Ethanol goes beyond the headlines, uncovering the benefits and limitations of North America's fuel ethanol industry. Ethanol production and use are becoming more efficient and less reliant on fossil fuel inputs. Learn about the technologies making ethanol make sense for our environment, economy, and security. Discover how the end of cheap oil is providing an opening for biofuels; how some cars get better fuel economy on 10% ethanol compared to ethanol-free gasoline; how the next generation of flex-fuel and hybrid electric vehicles could be optimized to get much better fuel economy on ethanol; how North America can produce significant quantities of biofuels without damaging our food production capacity; how sustainable farming methods are reducing ethanol's reliance on...
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21st Century Guide to Energy Crops and Biofuels, Agricultural Residue, Corn and Wheat Stover, Rice Straw, Oil Seeds, Switchgrass, Feedstocks, Sugars, Biorefineries, Ethanol, Syngas (Two CD-ROM Set)
by U.S. Government (Author)
This up-to-date and comprehensive electronic book on two CD-ROMs presents an incredible and totally revised collection of important documents and publications about biofuels, biomass energy, and biodiesel, with practical information for producers and users of these exciting alternative fuels of the future. There is information on the use of energy crops and agricultural residue, including corn and wheat stover, rice straw, oil seeds, switchgrass, and more. Encyclopedic coverage of every aspect of biofuels is included, with coverage of biopower, ethanol and methanol, hydrogen, methane, Fischer-Tropsch diesel, plant materials, and much more. It includes material on E85 ethanol programs with practical information for start-ups and entrepreneurs, including sources of funding and help. Federal...
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21st Century Biomass Research Roadmap - Biofuels and Cellulosic Ethanol, Feedstocks, Sugars, Thermochemicals, Integrated Biorefineries, Energy Crops and Fuels, Corn, Oil, Pulp, Paper (Ringbound)
by U.S. Government (Author)
This important and up-to-date printed report provides a guide to ongoing federal research on the production of biofuels from biomass. The Department of Energy (DOE) Multi-Year Program Plan for Biomass and Biorefinery Systems research and development notes that "biomass is the only domestic, sustainable and renewable primary energy resource that can provide liquid transportation fuels and organic chemicals and materials currently produced from fossil sources. Biomass also supports a technology transition to a hydrogen economy through either gasification or the production and reforming of liquid intermediates such as ethanol, methanol, or bio-oil. The three major current and potential markets for biomass and biomass related technologies are: transportation fuels, organic chemicals and...
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2009 Biomass: Multi-Year Program Plan, Feedstocks, Biochemical Conversion, Thermochemical, Biorefineries, Biofuels Infrastructure (Ringbound)
by U.S. Government (Author)
This ringbound book provides a reproduction of a major document from the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of the Biomass Program, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy: Multi-Year Program Plan for Biomass. Contents include: Program Overview , Market Overview and Federal Role of the Program, program Design, Program Goals, Schedule and Multiyear Targets, Program Portfolio Management, Program Portfolio Management Process, Program Analysis, Performance Assessment, Technology Research, Development & Deployment Plan, Feedstocks Platform, Feedstock Support of Biomass Program Strategic Goals, Feedstock Support of Biomass Program Performance Goals, Feedstock Technical Challenges and Barriers, Feedstocks Platform Approach for Overcoming Challenges and Barriers, Prioritizing Feedstocks Platform...
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Energy Crops - Biomass Research Roadmap, Biofuels, Feedstocks, Sugars, Perennial Crops, Wet and Dry Mill, Forest Products, Integrated Biorefineries, Corn, Oil, Pulp, Stover, Straw (Ringbound)
by U.S. Government (Author)
This important and up-to-date printed report provides a guide to ongoing federal research on the production of biofuels from biomass. The Department of Energy (DOE) Multi-Year Program Plan for Biomass and Biorefinery Systems research and development notes that biomass is the only domestic, sustainable and renewable primary energy resource that can provide liquid transportation fuels and organic chemicals and materials currently produced from fossil sources. Biomass also supports a technology transition to a hydrogen economy through either gasification or the production and reforming of liquid intermediates such as ethanol, methanol, or bio-oil. The three major current and potential markets for biomass and biomass related technologies are: transportation fuels, organic chemicals and...
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![Switchgrass (Panicum vigratum, L.) delivery to a biorefinery using integrated biomass supply analysis and logistics (IBSAL) model [An article from: Bioresource Technology]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/512SA5QAAFL._SL160_.jpg)
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Switchgrass (Panicum vigratum, L.) delivery to a biorefinery using integrated biomass supply analysis and logistics (IBSAL) model [An article from: Bioresource Technology]
by A. Kumar (Author), S. Sokhansanj (Author)
This digital document is a journal article from Bioresource Technology, published by Elsevier in 2007. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description: This study develops cost, energy input and carbon emissions for a number of switchgrass supply options. The Integrated Biomass Supply Analysis and Logistics (IBSAL) model developed at Oak Ridge National Laboratory is used to evaluate the delivery systems. Three biomass collection systems: baling, loafing and ensiling are evaluated. The number and operational performance of equipment are specified to complete collection operations within 120days of harvest after August 1. Bales are stacked and tarped on the farm...
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Sustainable Ethanol: Biofuels, Biorefineries, Cellulosic Biomass, Flex-Fuel Vehicles, and Sustainable Farming for Energy Independence [SUSTAINABLE ETHANOL] [Paperback]
by Jeffrey(Author) ; Goettemoeller, Adrian(Author) Goettemoeller (Author)
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The development of forest-based biorefineries: implications for market behavior and policy.: An article from: Forest Products Journal
by Patrik Soderhoim (Author), Robert Lundmark (Author)
This digital document is an article from Forest Products Journal, published by Forest Products Society on January 1, 2009. The length of the article is 9257 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details Title: The development of forest-based biorefineries: implications for market behavior and policy. Author: Patrik Soderhoim Publication: Forest Products Journal (Magazine/Journal) Date: January 1, 2009 Publisher: Forest Products Society Volume: 59 Issue: 1-2 Page: 6(11)
Distributed by Gale, a part of Cengage...
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