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Side-Stream
Chemicals Could Boost Biorefineries
Producing high-value
chemicals from ethanol feedstock could help economics
The
Southeast has abundant forest resources that could be used
as feedstock for biorefineries.
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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.
“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 School of
Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at the Georgia Institute of
Technology. “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. The green processes could produce chemicals worth up
to $25 per pound.
“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 for BioPower, BioFuels and Biomaterials,” 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.”
Eckert described
the green processes Sept. 10 at the 232nd national meeting
of the American Chemical Society in San Francisco. The
presentation was part of a session “Green Chemistry for
Fuel Synthesis and Processing.”
In 2004,
Eckert and Liotta received a Presidential Green Chemistry
Challenge Award for their development and promotion of benign
tunable solvents that couple reaction and separation processes.
Source
/ Credit: Georgia Institute of Technology
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