Title: Small Scale NZ Biofuel TechnoEconomic Investigation
1Small Scale NZ Biofuel Techno-Economic
Investigation
- VISHESH ACHARYA
- MASTER OF ENGINEERING
- DR. BRENT YOUNG
- CHEMICAL AND MATERIALS ENGINEERING
- UNIVERSITY OF AUCKLAND
2OVERVIEW
- Introduction to Bio Ethanol
- Benefits of Blending Ethanol with Petrol
- Bio Ethanol Manufacturing Process
- Classification of feedstock
- Potential of various Starch, Sugar and Cellulosic
materials as Feedstock in NZ - Conclusions
3What is Bio Ethanol?
- Alcohol based liquid fuel made from agricultural
bio mass - Produced by fermenting sugar from Energy crops
- EU, USA and Brazil mandate a minimum ethanol
blend. - NZ govt mandates selling a minimum of 0.25 of
all fuel sold to be that of Bio fuels, starting
2008
4Benefits of Blending Ethanol with Petrol
- Contains 35 mole percent O2
- Acts as an oxygenate facilitates combustion to
a greater extent - Increases energy efficiency by 1
5Manufacturing Process
ENZYMES
Feedstock
HYDROLYSIS
ENZYMES
50 EtOH
95 EtOH
YEAST
AZEOPTROPIC
10 EtOH
DEHYDRATOR
FERMENTATION
BEER STRIPPER
RECTIFIER
99.6 FUEL GRADE ETHANOL
SOLIDS
WATER
6Classification of Feedstock
- Classified into 3 types depending upon the
constituent sugars - SACCHARINE Directly fermentable 6 and 12 C
sugars - Glucose, Fructose and Maltose
- E.g. Sugar cane, Sugar beet, Whey, etc.
- STARCH Carbohydrates such as Starch
and Inulin - E.g. Maize, Wheat, Potatoes, etc.
- CELLULOSE Common material in plants
- Primary constituent of plant cell wall
- Wood, wood waste, paper, straw, etc.
7SACHHARINE Fruits Molasses
STARCH Grains Potatoes
CELLULOSE DRY Green
MILLING
PRE TREATMENT
SHREDDING
MASHING
MASHING
DILUTION
DILUTION
DILUTION
LIQUEFACTION
HYDROLYSIS
HYDROLYSIS
FERMENTATION
DISTILLATION
DEHYDRATION
DENATURING
STORAGE
8Starch Crops
- Maize, Wheat, Barley and Milo (Sorghum) are the
most extensively used Starch based feedstock - Maize is the most widely used feedstock
- Current annual production of Maize based ethanol
is 20 Billion L
9Ethanol from Maize
- Ethanol from Maize is produced by 2 methods
- Dry Milling
- Ethanol - Primary product
- Distiller Dried Grains and Solubles (DDGS) and
CO2 Secondary Products - Typical yields 460 L EtOH/T Maize
- 380 kg DDGS/T Maize
10Dry Milling Process for the production of Ethanol
from Maize Henderson, C. (2006)
11Ethanol from Maize
- 2. Wet Milling
- Gluten Feed, Starch, Corn oil, Corn Germ and Corn
Syrup Liquid Primary products. - Starch is further hydrolysed and fermented to
Ethanol - Typical Yield 440 L EtOH / T Dry Maize
- Yield lower than Dry milling as some starch is
lost in co-products. - Process more complex than Dry milling
- Hence, requires higher capital investment
12Wet Milling Process for the production of Ethanol
from Maize Henderson, C. (2006)
13Ethanol from NZ Maize
- 150,000 tonne Maize grown on 13,000 Ha. of land
- NZ Maize yield 12.5 t/Ha (U.S. Maize yield 8
t/Ha) - Energy input for un-irrigated arable Maize
farming in NZ 1683 MJ / t Maize - Avg. US Maize farming input 2425 MJ / t Maize
14Cost Ethanol from NZ Maize
- Potential Yield 397 L EtOH / t Maize
- Dry Mill Process, 95 ML/yr
- 90.3 NZc/L EtOH
- Maize sourced from within 100km _at_ NZ10/t
- Wet Mill Process, 95 ML/yr
- 76.6 NZc/L EtOH
- Maize sourced from within 100km _at_ NZ10/t
- Ethanol made using Geothermal Steam to be cheaper
by 4.5 NZc/L
15Ethanol from Sugar Crops
- Sugar Cane and Sugar Beet widely used Ethanol
feedstocks - Brazil produced 4.5b Gallons of Ethanol in 2006
- Contains Sucrose which can be directly fermented
into Ethanol - Hence, processes are relatively simpler and more
cost effective - Sugar Cane is of particular interest
- Has high ethanol yield 7750 L/Ha (Corn 2750
L/Ha) - Shorter fermentation period of 6-10 hours (Corn
48 - 72 hrs)
16Ethanol from Waste Products Cellulosic Waste
- Cellulosic materials most abundant and
potentially cheap feedstock for ethanol
production - Includes wastes from agriculture, forest and
municipal solid waste. - Potential to exploit 290,000 t.p.a of landfilled
paper waste and 430,000 t.p.a. of cereal straw. - Manufacturing cost estimated at NZ0.7-NZ1.30/ L
EtOH - Technology currently exists on Lab. scale only
17Ethanol from Potato Processing Waste
- 500,000 t.p.a grown on 20 of total arable farm
land - Solid potato waste accounts for about 20 of
potato crop - Potatoes have a high fermentable carbohydrate
content of 20 w/w - Starch from 150,000 tonne potato waste can be
potentially converted to 1.5 MML of ethanol - Estimated production cost NZ1.4-1.5 / L EtOH
- Co-processing with other feedstock likely to
reduce these costs by 50c to NZ0.9-1.0 / L EtOH
18Ethanol from Fruit Crop Waste Kiwi fruit
- Kiwi fruit has very high content of Starch,
Fructose and Sucrose. - Fermentable sugar content estimated as 8(w/w).
- Average ethanol yield of 44 L EtOH/t kiwi fruit.
- Cost of making ethanol from kiwi fruit, in an
already existing ethanol plant is estimated at
NZ0.7-0.8/ L EtOH
19Conclusions
- NZ grows several agricultural products that have
the potential to be converted into bio ethanol - Sugars crops such as Sugar cane are easier to
process than Starch crops such as Maize. - Ethanol can be produced in NZ at the cost of
NZ0.7-1.0/L EtOH depending upon the feedstock
used.
20Acknowledgement
- Foundation of Research Science and Technology
(FRST) for their generous financial support - Derek Turnbull, Steve Holmes
- Tamaki Controls Ltd.
- Project Mentors