corn to ethanol. agenda lcorn to to ethanol »starch »energy balance »production –dry milling...
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Corn to ethanol
Agenda
Corn to to ethanol» Starch» Energy balance» Production
– Dry milling– Wet milling
» Problems Corn to ethanol subsidy Archer Daniels Midlands (ADM) Discussion
Rise of biofuels (history)
H. Ford 1908 R. Diesel 1987 Sugar cane ethanol 1920 OPEC oil embargo (1973) Methyl tertiary-butyl ether MTBE (started in
1992, phased out in 2000) (2-methoxy-2-methylpropane )» Good blending» Increase octant number» Cheap, produced from natural gas» Toxicity
Oil in Middle East $$$$
Corn in US
Corn plantCorn kernel (without the fibre)-starch alcoholCorn fibre-lignocellulosic alcoholCorn stover-lignocellulosic alcohol
Starch
White powder
Corn, potatoes, tapioca
Carbohydrate, sugar
» Many glucose molecules
Chemical Composition of Starch
Plants contain two types of starch, linear (helix) amyloses and branched amylopectins.
The amounts of each of these starch types present is plant dependent.» Typical amounts are 25% amylose, 75%
amylopectin
Amylose
14 -D-Glucopyranose Because of the bonding, this molecule forms a helix
» It takes 6 gluopyranose units for each turn» Amylose is not water soluble
O
H
O
H
HO
H
O
OHHH
OH
O
H
H
HO
H
O
OHHH
OH
n
Amylopectin
14 D-Glucopyranose + 16 D Glucopyranose
Amylopectin is a branched polymer» Branching inhibits
helix formation» This starch is
therefore somewhat water (hot) soluble.
O
H
O
H
HO
H
O
OHHH
OH
O
H
H
HO
H
OHHH
OH
O
H
O
H
HO
H
O
OHHH
OH
O
H
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n
US ethanol production
Corn versus crude oil (US)
Corn
One bushel of corn (56 pounds after husks and cobs are removed) provides:» 31.5 pounds of starch or » 33 pounds of sweetener or » 2.8 gallons of ethanol
+ 13.5 pounds of gluten feed 2.6 pounds of gluten meal 1.5 pounds of corn oil
Corn to ethanol
US produces 4,86 billion gallons of ethanol from corn (2006)
Production cost ~$1.09/gallon Fossil fuel energy used to make the fuel
(input) compared with energy in the fuel (output) 1:1.3 or negatives values
Greenhouse gas emission during production and use 22% less compared with gasoline
Biofuels-comparison
Production (billion gallons)
Production cost ($)
Energy balance
GHEreductio
n (%)
Corn 4.86 1.09 1.3 22
Sugar cane 3.96 0.87 8.0 55-90
Lignocellulose
NA NA 2-36 91
Biodiesel 0.50 NA 2.5 68
Dry versus wet milling
Dry versus wet milling » Dry grind process: the entire corn kernel is first ground into flour and
the starch in the flour is converted to ethanol via fermentation– CO2 (used in the carbonated beverage industry) – Animal feed called distillers dried grain
» Wet milling: first the separating the corn kernel into starch, protein, germ and fiber in an aqueous medium prior to fermentation
– The primary products of wet milling include starch and starch-derived products (e.g. high fructose corn syrup and ethanol), corn oil, corn gluten, and corn gluten
Corn (starch) can be converted into ethanol in 3-5 days» Starch + water to form a mash» Mash + heat + enzymes (amlysases)=glucose» Glucose + yeast (fermentation) = CH3CH2OH + CO2 » “Beer”=10 - 15 % CH3CH2OH and 85 % H2O» The "beer" is then boiled in a distillation column to separate H2O and
CH3CH2OH up to 95%» Additional 5% of H2O removed by molecular sieves (size exclusion)
100% ethanol
pH 6+heat 110°C +-amylase30 min liquid, dextrins (5-10 glucose)
Yeast+ mash+glucoamylase (SSF)glucose and maltose fermented to ethanol and CO2, 48-72 hours
5% water removed by sieves
Conventional distillation 95%
52°C, sulfurous acid (0.2%) 30-36 hours
-amylase+heat 90°C+glucoamylase ,SHF, series of reactorssemicontinuous process
Corn wet milling process
Ethanol versus oil subsidy
Since 1968 ethanol industry had received $11.6 billion in tax incentives
Since 1968 oil industry had received over $150 billion in tax benefits.
Oil industry produced 1,068 times more energy
Subsidy per unit of energy was 54 higher for ethanol (ethanol gets 54 cents oil gets 1cent).
US General Accounting Office
Problems (1)
Environmental problems» Greenhouse gas emission
– Ethanol plants burn natural gas or coal to create the steam, adding to fossil fuel emission with CO2 from fermentation
» Energy value» Pesticides, herbicides (nitrogen runoff from fertilizers)» Fertilizers (N, made with natural gas and diesel farm
machinery)» Water demands: 3.6-6gallons of water/1 gallon of
ethanol Social problems
» Competing with food industry– Doubling the price of corn (food riots in Mexico)
Problems (2)land availability
Problems (3)
More environmental problems» “Most economic analyses of corn-to-
ethanol production overlook the costs of environmental damages, should add another 23 cents per gallon”
» Soil erosion– "Corn production in the US erodes soil about 12
x faster than the soil can be reformed, and irrigating corn mines groundwater 25 % faster than the natural recharge rate of ground water “
David Pimental Cornell University
Corn to ethanol (1)
1 acre of US corn =7,110 pounds of corn = 328 gallons of ethanol
Planting, growing and harvesting that much corn requires about 140 gallons of fossil fuels and costs $347 per acre.
Even before corn is converted to ethanol, the feedstock costs $1.05 per gallon of ethanol.
Corn to ethanol (2)
“The average US automobile, traveling 10,000 miles a year on pure ethanol (not a gasoline-ethanol mix) would need about 852 gallons of the corn-based fuel. This would take 11 acres to grow, based on net ethanol production. This is the same amount of cropland required to feed seven Americans”
David Pimental Cornell University
Corn to ethanol (3)
“If all the automobiles in the United States were fueled with 100 % ethanol, a total of about 97% of US land area would be needed to grow the corn feedstock. Corn would cover nearly the total land area of the United States”
David Pimental Cornell University
Corn to ethanol industry
Profits in 2006 for Archer Daniels Midlands (ADM) ~DOUBLED (increased from $259 million to $446 million)
August 2006 US 101 ethanol plants» 39 refineries are under construction» 7 existing are expanding
Corn to ethanol plants in US
Based on August 30th, 2006
Discussion
What do you think about corn to ethanol process, industry?» Something positive or negative?