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Potential of Eichhornia Crassipes for Biomass Refining

AIChE Conference 2007. Potential of Eichhornia Crassipes for Biomass Refining. Jessica E. Hronich, Lealon Martin, Joel Plawsky, & Henry Bungay November 7th, 2007. Introduction. Department of Energy goal: 60 Bgal/yr ethanol by 2030 1 Current production

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Potential of Eichhornia Crassipes for Biomass Refining

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  1. AIChE Conference 2007 Potential of Eichhornia Crassipes for Biomass Refining Jessica E. Hronich, Lealon Martin, Joel Plawsky, & Henry Bungay November 7th, 2007

  2. Introduction • Department of Energy goal: • 60 Bgal/yr ethanol by 20301 • Current production • 5.4 Bgal/yr blended into gasoline for 20062 • 129 Ethanol plants, and growing • The need for diverse feedstocks • Corn grain can only meet 15% of transportation needs1 • Cellulosic ethanol can fill remainder • Greater energy output/input ratio3 1U.S. DOE. 2006. Breaking the Biological Barriers to Cellulosic Ethanol: A Joint Research Agenda, DOE/SC-0095, U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science and Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (www.doegenomestolife.org/biofuels/).2 “Biofuels in the U.S. Transportation Sector” Energy Information Association, Oct. 15, 2007. (http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/analysispaper/biomass.html#1)3 Bourne, J.K. “Green Dreams” National Geographic, 2007. (http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/2007-10/biofuels/biofuels-interactive.html)

  3. Ideal Attributes Wide availability Ease of cultivation Frequent harvest cycles No / low competition with food crops Easy to process Inexpensive Water hyacinth Global invasive nuisance weed Growth can exceed 200 tons DM / ha / yr 2 week harvest cycle Aquatic plant Low-tech processing Millions of dollars spent each year to remove / dispose Feedstock Evaluation

  4. Process Description • Cultivation • Harvest & Collection • Pressing • Pretreatment / Storage • Hydrolysis / Fermentation

  5. Infested waterways Removal credit Developing countries Hyacinth cultivation (farms) Unused commercial ponds / lakes Cultivation

  6. Harvest & Collection

  7. Harvest & Collection Factory • Novel cutter design • Simply slice mats • Mat width design variable • Length dependent on connectivity • Use less energy than traditional harvesters • Tow swaths of mats to shore • Cut pattern to allow re-growth

  8. Pressing • Can remove approximately 97 wt% of the water • Will decrease volume for silage • Water will be processed (if necessary) and returned to lake

  9. Pretreatment / Storage • Partial Anaerobic digestion • Approximately 14 days • Less energy intensive • Remove loose water • Combine with storage to reduce costs

  10. Process Cost Estimation • Estimation allowed for multiple inputs to affect overall cost per ton to produce • Referenced current biomass-to-ethanol evaluations • Manufacturing cost estimation for chemical process industry adapted for agribusiness plan1 • Key design parameters taken from literature, manufacturers, and best guesses 1Ulrich D, Vasudevan T, (2004)Chemical Engineering Process Design and Economics: A Practical Guide. Ulrich Publishing,409-435

  11. Key Design Parameters • Pressing • 97 wt% water removal • Power usage: 18HP/ton fiber/hr • Pretreatment / Storage • 14 days to digest • Misc. • Labor ($10 / hr + benefits) • Overheads • Taxes, insurance • Depreciation • Cultivation • Lake covered in 300 acres hyacinth • Located in United States • 100 ton dry matter / ha / yr • Harvest / Collection • Cut width of 3.5 m • Cut speed of 45 m / min • Harvested 8 hours / day

  12. Cost Estimation Total Cost: $28 / ton of dry matter

  13. Sensitivity Analysis Biomass Cost ($/dry ton) Cut Width (m) Cut Speed (m/min) • Lowest possible cost • 1 harvester & 1 transport boat • Cut width greater than 7m • Cut speed greater than 45 m/min • Operation most likely at 3.5 m and 45 m/min

  14. Future Work • Investigation of digestion process • Temperature • pH • Residence time • Hydrolysis methods • Acid • Enzymatic • Fermentation yields • Quality of biomass produced • Application to other aquatic nuisance weeds Photo courtesy of Willey Durden, USDA Agricultural Research Service, www.forestryimages.org; Image Number 0002100.

  15. Summary • Water hyacinth as a feedstock • Rapid growth rate • Wide availability • Low cost • Exportable low-technology process • Cost Estimation / Sensitivity Analysis • E. Crassipes is an economically viable biomass feedstock • A blight on an ecosystem can be used as an economic benefit • Cost competitive with other feedstocks (less than $40 per dry ton)

  16. Acknowledgements • NSF IGERT fellowship • Rensselaer Chemical & Biological Engineering • The Martin Group

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