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Sarah Agara, Robert Andries, Nicholas Hoeft, Victor Hogen, David Jahnke

Cellulose to Cellulose and Beyond. Complete Processing of Sugarcane Bagasse. Sarah Agara, Robert Andries, Nicholas Hoeft, Victor Hogen, David Jahnke. Conceptual Design & Innovation. Sugarcane Destiny - Food or Biofuel?. Product and Process Description.

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Sarah Agara, Robert Andries, Nicholas Hoeft, Victor Hogen, David Jahnke

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  1. Cellulose to Cellulose and Beyond Complete Processing of Sugarcane Bagasse Sarah Agara, Robert Andries, Nicholas Hoeft, Victor Hogen, David Jahnke Conceptual Design & Innovation Sugarcane Destiny - Food or Biofuel? Product and Process Description • 15 tons/day sugarcane leaves 5 tons/day bagasse • Bagasse currently burned • 50% Cellulose, 25% Hemicellulose,20% Lignin • Fermentable glucose present, simply locked in cellulose and hemi-cellulose • Australian sugarcane along northeastern coastline • Interior unused, soil water retention limiting factor Pretreatment & Separation: • Mechanical Processing Desiccation & Milling • Homogenous particle size for quality control • Acid & Enzyme Hydrolysis  Reaction Pretreatment • Strategic solubility differences and depolymerization • Glucose and Pentose Fermentation Ethanol Yield • Maximize cellular conversion to valuable molecules • Laboratory Bench Scale-up  Continuous Processing • Reagent and solvent recovery systems To Saccharification or Hydrogel Formation To Saccharification Bagasse 11,000 kg/day 54% Water To Lignin Processing Saccharification and Fermentation: Cellulose, Hemicellulose from Pretreatment & Separation Hydrogel Solution: Semi-Arid to Arable • Modify cellulose creating water retaining hydrogels • Hinders water evaporation and run-off • Opens inland resources • Enzymatically degradable • Expanded agriculture not food competitive • Sugar towards ethanol + more bagasse • Integrated with ethanol and bioplasticprocesses Environment and Sustainability Lignin Processing: • Hydrogel Depositing • Expands local agriculture potential • Uses carbon before eventual oxidation • Sustainable Ethanol Production • Expandable agriculture potentially self-sustaining • Hydrogel product amplifies other products From Pretreatment & Separation Hydrogel Formation: • Economics • Estimated $7.7 million in annual revenues • Estimated Capital Costs - $9.2 million + Installation and Piping Markup • Estimated Operating Costs - $2.5 million • Break-even in year 13 • NPV = $5.4 million ; IRR = 16.09% • Sustainability allows long-run mindset and future growth potential From Pretreatment & Separation 2,500 kg/day 3,240kg/day Acknowledgements

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