1 / 1

Ion Exchange for the Production of Cellulosic Ethanol

Ion Exchange for the Production of Cellulosic Ethanol Hammervold , C. Cochran, J. Belsher , K. Childress Sponsored by Trillium FiberFuels , Inc. Introduction. Project Focus. Column Design. Column Design. Biomass contains a multitude of ions such as calcium and magnesium.

gray-boone
Télécharger la présentation

Ion Exchange for the Production of Cellulosic Ethanol

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ion Exchange for the Production of Cellulosic Ethanol • Hammervold, C. Cochran, J. Belsher, K. Childress • Sponsored by Trillium FiberFuels, Inc. Introduction Project Focus Column Design Column Design • Biomass contains a multitude of ions such as calcium and magnesium • Isomerization enzyme works most efficiently at a neutral pH • Cellulosic ethanol is ethanol derived from straw and wood biomass • Previous system modeling was done with a xylose-calcium solution • Xylose must be isomerized prior to fermentation • Calcium ions are known to poison the enzyme used for isomerization • Ion exchange is an effective means of Ca2+ removal • The project focuses on the design and scale-up of two ion exchange columns • Cation resin exchanges calcium and sodium ions for protons, therefore significantly decreasing the effluent pH • Anion resin is required to increase the pH to above 4.0 • The production of cellulosic ethanol requires less energy than starch based ethanol Acid Hydrolysate • Acid hydrolysate was used for a more accurate process model • Acid hydrolysate has proton concentrations that are much greater than Ca2+ concentrations • High cation concentration pushes Ca2+ off the resin bead, causing simultaneous treatment and regeneration • The team could not obtain a feasible column design using acid hydrolysate Production Breakdown into simple sugars Resin Specifications Fermentation Pretreatment • Mechanical Breakdown • Steam Explosion • Strong Acid Treatment • Strong Base Treatment • Enzymatic Breakdown • Yeast Fermentation Cation Exchange Anion Exchange Figure 1: Benchtop ion exchange column designed and built for the removal of Ca2+ from straw hydrolysate Theoretical Scale-Up • Team was asked to scale up for 50 L of a 400 ppm Na+, 400 ppm Ca2+, and 400 ppm K+ solution • Cation column will need to have 4.5 L of resin and the anion column will need to have 5.5 L of resin • Cation resin volume was verified by benchtop model • Calcium ions poison the isomerization enzyme • Ca2+ exchange with H+ on active sites • pH is significantly reduced due to addition of protons • Exchange capacity :1.8 eq/L • Regenerant: 7% HCl • Xylose isomerization requires neutral pH for highest efficiency • No actual ion exchange takes place – organics and acids absorb to the resin • Exchange capacity: 1.6 eq/L • Regenerant: 4% NaOH Wood Structure Operating Parameters Flow Rate and Breakpoint • Government grant specifies Trillium FiberFuels, Inc. to be able to process 200 L/day of straw hydrolysate • Ca2+ must be removed to a concentration below 2.0 ppm • Changing the flow rate of the feed solution alters the shape of the breakthrough curve • Two different test solutions were created: one using DI-water and one using tap water. • Lignin physically inhibits enzyme access to sugar polymers • Traditionally, cellulosic ethanol production is focused on the breakdown of cellulose to glucose Figure 4: Column design using theoretical values for resin capacities. All dimensions are in inches. The flow rate is 225 ml/min or 0.05 cm/s. Pumps will need to be rated for a 14.7 psi pressure drop. Trillium FiberFuels, Inc. Process Acknowledgements • Steve Potochnik and all the others at Trillium FiberFuels, Inc. • Dr. Azizian for ICP use • Dr. Harding • Increased demands require a more efficient means of ethanol production • Breakdown of hemicellulose to xylose could increase ethanol yields by 20-40% depending on biomass • Trillium FiberFuels is using agricultural residue (i.e. rye grass straw) as their feedstock Figure 3: ICP data shows that there is a significant difference in resin capacity between Trillium tap water and DI water. The process goal is to maintain a calcium ion concentration below 2 ppm, represented by the black line. Data also shows that the superficial velocity has a large influence over capacity.

More Related