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Journal article

The multi feedstock biorefinery - Assessing the compatibility of alternative feedstocks in a 2G wheat straw biorefinery process

From

University of Copenhagen1

Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark2

PROSYS - Process and Systems Engineering Centre, Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark3

PILOT PLANT, Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark4

Vestforsyning A/S5

Aarhus University6

For second generation (2G) bioethanol refineries, the feedstock supply is one of the important parameters in terms of cost and consistency. Biorefineries are in most cases designed for a specific type of feedstock. For some biorefineries the use of multiple feedstocks is an option, but how would such feedstocks perform when used in a process designed and optimized for a specific feedstock? There is no ‘one‐size‐fit‐all’ processing package, due to variations in composition and structure of different feedstock types, but due to the size of commercial biorefineries, only minor adjustments of the processing parameters is practically feasible.

In this study, 16 alternative feedstocks were characterized and compared to the benchmark feedstock wheat straw under identical processing conditions. The alternative feedstocks studied were: barley straw, rye straw, grass straw, oat straw, Norway spruce sawdust, mixed softwood sawdust, oat wrap, biogas fiber, deep litter, washed deep litter, ryegrass fiber, lucerne fiber, ryegrass chaff, mixed grain chaff, rape seed press cake and beer production mash.

These biomasses varied in carbohydrate content and accessibility after hydrothermal pretreatment. Applying a hydrothermal pretreatment under identical conditions, the subsequent enzymatic convertibility of these biomasses ranged from 0.5% to complete conversion based on their glucan content. Water retention value was determined and correlated to enzymatic convertibility, which provided a simple method for indirect measurement of biomass recalcitrance.

Ethanol potentials were estimated based on carbohydrate release from enzymatic hydrolysis, and yeast toxicity test was performed on liquid fractions from hydrothermal pretreatment. Furthermore, a number of key processing indicators, including market price, logistics and availability, were taken into consideration based on a proposed full‐scale 2G ethanol plant in Denmark.

The overall results show that while some feedstocks had inferior performance compared to wheat straw, identical or even superior performance was observed from barley‐, oat‐, and ryegrass feedstocks.

Language: English
Year: 2018
Pages: 946-959
ISSN: 17571707 and 17571693
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1111/gcbb.12557
ORCIDs: 0000-0001-7036-2814 , 0000-0002-6537-0155 and 0000-0001-8908-9977

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