Advanced Technologies in the Sugarcane Agroindustry

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Advanced Technologies in the Sugarcane Agroindustry

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Title: Advanced Technologies in the Sugarcane Agroindustry


1
Chapter 5
  • Advanced Technologies in the Sugarcane
    Agroindustry

Professor Marcos Fava Neves Antony Ammar
(a.ammar_at_hotmail.fr) Gabriel Rausch
(rauschea_at_gmail.com) Guilherme Abbud
(g.abbud_at_gmail.com)
2
Hydrolysis of lignocellulosic residues
  • Bioethanol has been produced through hydrolysis
    and fermentation of lignocellulosic materials
    since the end of 19th century.
  • But it is only in the last 20 years that this
    technology has been proposed to serve the fuels
    market.

3
Hydrolysis of lignocellulosic residues
  • In the next 5 or 10 years, with this technology
    totally developed, it would be possible to
    produce bioethanol in lands where sugarcane isnt
    suitable.
  • Nowadays, the researches are producing models in
    a short scale and trying to adapt it to the
    market.

4
Hydrolysis of lignocellulosic residues
  • Lignocellulosic
  • Polysaccharides
  • Cellulose (40-60) (Easier fermentation (6 C)
    S. cerevisiae harder hydrolysis)
  • Hemicellulose (20-40) (Harder fermentation (5
    C) easier hisdrolisys)
  • Lignin (10-25)

5
Lingnin
  • Is not related to simple sugar molecules
    (fermentation doesnt work on it).
  • It has energy stored permit self-sufficiency in
    eletric power ? more efficiency (technology) ?
    energy for sale.
  • Less external fossil energy resources.

6
Lignocellulosic materials How does it work?
7
Step by step
  • First of all, the feedstock is cleaned and
    breaked ? Reason to make it more susceptible to
    subsequent treatments.
  • Next Pre-treatment
  • Remove the lignin
  • Hydrolysis of hemicellulose (several methods can
    be used physical, chemical and combined).

8
Step by step
  • Hydrolysis of cellulose the cellulose is
    converted into glucose, according to the
    following reaction

n C6H10O5 n H2O ? C6H12O6
9
Hydrolysis of lignocellulosic residues
  • Hydrolysis uses complex and multiphase
    technologies based on acid or enzymatic routes,
    or both.
  • Acid hydrolysis
  • Concentrated
  • Diluted
  • Enzymatic hydrolysis

10
Comparison of different options for cellulose
hydrolysis
Source Sugarcane-Based Bioethanol
All these process are still in early stages of
development, so they can be strongly changed.
11
Comparison of different options for cellulose
hydrolysis
  • Enzymatic hydrolysis mild conditions
  • Great saccharification
  • Causes simultaneous saccharification and
    fermentation
  • Lower maintenance costs (less/zero corrosion)
  • Less environmental problems (no residues)

12
Schematic of the process of ethanol production by
hydrolysis of biomass
Source Sugarcane-Based Bioethanol
13
Problem 5-Carbon-Sugars
  • Cannot be fermented by wild lines of S.
    cerevisiae
  • What usually happens?
  • exclude this fraction of the sugars
  • carry out the fermentation in two steps (reducing
    the profits)
  • Future
  • genetic engineering micro-organisms capable of
    fermenting both sugars with high yields

14
Challenges
  • Reduce the price of biomass (which could be 40
    of ethanol cost in norther countries)
  • Making ethanol generated by hydrolysis of
    lignocellulosic materials economically viable

15
Gasification for production of fuels and
electricity
Air Heat Pressure
  • Since 1940
  • Process
  • - Biomass CO , H2 , CO2 , Water Steam
    , volatile HCs, ash
  • Uses become heterogeneous materials (Biomass)
    in homogeneous materials (Gases)
  • Fossil industrys experience can be used in the
    process, emphasizing that this is much more
    complex
  • Scale production influences the economy of the
    production process

16
Gasification for production of fuels and
electricity
  • This method appears like a good option for
    production of liquid fuels and bioelectricity,
    both demand pushed by a new era of global
    responsability Including reduce greenhouse
    gases emition and subistitute consumption of
    petroleum-derived products
  • There is a lack of develpment and technology to
    achieve this goal.
  • Political barriers are still a paradgim to be
    crossed

17
Gasification of Biomass integrated with combined
cycles (BIG/GT-CC technology)
  • The Biomass Integrated Gasification/Gas Turbine
    Combined Cycle system operates in a very high
    temperature (1200) double of the convencional
    systems, reducing thermodynamic losses and
    increasing efficiency.

18
Gasification of Biomass integrated with combined
cycles (BIG/GT-CC technology)
PRE-TREATMENT
Here, there are few types of Gasifier Project,
i.e. Circulating Fluidized Bed (CFB) that
operates at atmosphere temperature and has lower
efficiency than the Pressurized CFB.
Source Sugar-cane Based Bioethanol
19
Gasification of Biomass integrated with combined
cycles (BIG/GT-CC technology)
Types of Gasification technology
Source Sugar-cane Based Bioethanol
  • Even with the great effort, there was just one
    eletric power plant operated for a significant
    time in Värnamo, Sweden.

20
Gasification of Biomass integrated with combined
cycles (BIG/GT-CC technology)
  • This is a great opportunity for sugar-cane
    industry sector due the relative low cost of the
    Biomass in add, its storage is too expensive.

21
Synthesis Fuels
  • Various biofuels may be obtained out of
    synthesis gas (syngas) produced from biomass.

Source Sugar-cane Based Bioethanol
The system has to be isolated from the atmosphere
to avoid final products joyining Nitrogen
22
Gasification of Biomass integrated with combined
cycles (BIG/GT-CC technology)
  • The reactors

Conversion Rate
fixed bed (gas phase)
fluidized bed (gas phase)
mud bed (liquid phase)
Investmentes
23
Synthesis Fuels
  • Comparison of yields and costs for fuel
    production from synthesis gas

Source Sugar-cane Based Bioethanol
24
Synthesis Fuels
  • Other types of energy originated from SC
  • Butanol (C4H8O) industrial solvent, gasoline
    additive
  • Biodiesel from biochemical processes that uses
    sugars its economic and technical feasibility,
    costs and yields are still unknown

25
Using bioethanol as a petrochemical or
alcohol-chemical input
  • Plastic materials (artificial polymers)? very
    important nowadays
  • Replace other materials wood and glass
  • Create new products packing and coating
  • Petrochemical industry ? natural gas and
    petroleum-naphtha ? plastics.

26
Using bioethanol as a petrochemical or
alcohol-chemical input
  • This production processes involves 3 categories
  • A) First generation industries ? provides the
    basics products? as ethene, propene and
    buthadiene.
  • B) Second generation industries ? transforms the
    basic products into final petrochemical products
    ? like polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP) and
    polyvinyl chloride (PVC), for example.
  • C)Third generation industries in which final
    products are chemically modified or built in
    final consumer products ? as films, containers
    and objects.

27
Using bioethanol as a petrochemical or
alcohol-chemical input
  • Bioethanol homogeneous and reactive substance
  • Substrate in various petrochemical processes ?
    alcohol-chemical
  • Transformation of the ethanol
  • Dehydration ? ethene ? second generation
    products
  • It can be said that the bioethanol is an input
    for a wide range of traditional petrochemical
    products, by its conversion into first and second
    generation processes.

28
Using bioethanol as a petrochemical or
alcohol-chemical input
  • Market of bioethanol as alcohol-chemical is
    significant
  • Bioethanol demand by the Brazilian industries ? 7
    milion cubic meters
  • One third of production observed in the 2006/07
    harvest.
  • Brazil 3 of world production
  • Great potential for expanding the use of
    bioethanol from sugarcane as an input on a global
    scale
  • Basic technologies are known ? relative price of
    ethanol compared with other inputs.

29
First steps of ethanol-chemical industry in
Brazil
  • 80s Oxiteno and Coperbo use of ethanol to
    replace fossil inputs in the Brazilian
    petrochemical industry
  • 1985 unfavorable prices ? routes were
    discontinued
  • Nowadays high price of fossil inputs ?it shows
    renewed interest

30
Biodegradable plastics production
  • 2004 production of plastics was 230 million tons
  • 2010 expected 300 million tons
    (Dröscher, 2006).
  • Great environmental concern
  • Material is quickly discarded increase in
    the amount
  • Slow decay rates
    of waste
  • After use less than 10 are recycled and
    majority is destined for landfills
    (Waste-online, 2008)
  • It takes 100 to 500 years for nature to degrade
    completely

31
Biodegradable plastics production
  • Solve this problem recycling use of degradable
    plastics
  • Biodegradable plastics
  • Polymers
  • Completely degrated by microbial action in a
    short time
  • Important advantage produced from renewed
    sources
  • (starch, sugars and fatty acids)
  • Ex PLA polylactic acid ? composed of lactic
    acid monomers obtained by microbial fermentation.
  • Ex 2 PHB (polyhydroxybutyrate) ? which is
    biosynthesized as a storage energy of
    microrganisms.

32
Biodegradable plastics production
  • 1920 first observation of bioplastics
  • 1970 Oil crisis ? stimulated the search for
    alternative sources of materials and energy
  • Today structures and routes and applications of
    many bioplastics are well understood
  • But, there are some limitations for large-scale
    production
  • special growth conditions required (by
    micro-organisms) for the synthesis of these
    compounds,
  • difficulty to synthesize them by using low cost
    precursors
  • high costs of recovery

33
Biodegradable plastics production
  • Even using micro-organisms able to ferment low
    costs source of carbon (molasses, sucrose,
    vegetable oil and methane), these processes are
    still not competitive with conventional
    generation of synthetic plastics (Luengo et al.,
    2003).
  • Besides economic concerns
  • Positive balance in the life cicle of biopolymers
    ? used as substitutes for petrochemical
    materials.
  • Energy gains are small use of fossil fuels.
  • Derived from sugarcane take advantage use of
    bagasse as na energy input in the process.

34
  • Comparison of energy consumption and GEE
    (Greenhouse gases)
  • Emissions in the production
  • of various plastics.
  • 5 plastics of fossil orign
  • low density polyethylene (LDPE),
  • high density polyethylene (HDPE),
  • polypropylene (PP),
  • polystyrene (PS),
  • polyethylene therephthalate (b-PET)
  • 2 co-polymeric polyesters produced with biomass
  • P(3HA), based on soybean oil,
  • P (3HB), based on glucose

35
Biodegradable plastics production
  • Brazil, Serrana (SP) PHB industrial S.A.
  • Is located attached to Usina da Pedra
  • Production of PHB (polyhydroxybutyrate) operating
    on a pilot scale with a capacity of 60 tons per
    year.
  • Fermentation is promoted by micro-organisms
    cultivated in a medium (sugarcane sugar and
    inorganic nutrients) (Nonato
    et al., 2001).
  • 10 of all energy consumed in the life cycle of
    PHB comes from non-renewable sources of energy
  • Bagasse provides all the energy necessary in the
    process (Seabra and Macedo,
    2006).

36
Biorefinery multiple products and integral use
of raw materials
  • Definition of a biorefinery
  • An integrated complex capable of producing
    products fuels, chemicals , and power- using
    diferent types of biomass in a model that would
    permit reaching greater efficiencies
    thermodynamic, economic, and environmental terms.
    (Ondrey 2006)
  • Can we consider sugar cane industry as a
    biorefinery?
  • Both government and large firms invested in sugar
    cane industry to bring a global solution in long
    term

37
Biorefinery multiple products and integral use
of raw materials
Definition of a biorefinery
38
Biorefinery multiple products and integral use
of raw materials
  • A sustainable breakthrough for the energetical
    global challenge?
  • Analysts estimated that this industry at its
    maturity will be 70 of global energy
    efficiency and it will be competitive in economic
    terms
  • One thing to keep in mind if the technology is
    advanced enough, we can make a biorefinery with
    any source of biomass

39
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