Title: 2005 OBP Biennial Peer Review
12005 OBP Biennial Peer Review
- Pretreatment Enzymatic Hydrolysis
- Rick Elander (NREL)
- Biochemical Conversion Platform
- November 15, 2005
2Work Breakdown Structure
3Platform Fit with Pathways
4Barriers
Commercial Success Barriers Price of Sugars from
Cellulosic Biomass
Major General Barriers Feedstock Cost Sugars
Composition Sugars Yield Conversion Rate Sugars
Quality Capital Investment
RD Technical Barriers Feedstock-Sugars
Interface Biomass Pretreatment Enzymatic
Hydrolysis Sugars Processing Process Integration
- Biomass Recalcitrance
- New Pathways
- Enabling Tools
5Overview
Budget (FY05)
Partners
- NREL (Pretreatment and Enzymatic Hydrolysis Task)
- Aventine/Purdue University
- CAFI Universities
- Auburn University
- Dartmouth College
- Michigan State University
- Purdue University
- Texas AM University
- University of British Columbia
- Neoterics Intl.
- Harris Group Inc.
- Novozymes
- Genencor Intl.
- Merrick Co.
- University of Louisville
6Approach
- Overall Goal Enable less severe (less costly)
pretreatment and more economical enzymatic
hydrolysis/sugar production - Understand how pretreatment alters biomass
structure and composition - Assess required enzyme loadings and types
- Understand response of feedstock types
representing several pathways - Across different pretreatment processes and
ranges of severities - Role of non-cellulase enzymes
- High solids pretreatment and saccharification
2.1. Pretreatment and Enzymatic Hydrolysis
2.3. Processing Integration
2.4. Targeted Conversion Research
7Pretreatment and Enzymatic Hydrolysis Projects
- Projects Supporting Near Term Biorefinery
Opportunities - Bridge to Corn Ethanol Project (Aventine/Purdue)
- Hemicellulose Extraction Subtask (NREL)
- Pretreatment Effects on Feedstock Structure and
Types - Exploratory Saccharification Subtask (NREL)
- Feedstock Qualification Subtask (NREL)
- Integration of Leading Biomass Pretreatments
Project (CAFI 2) - Enzymatic Hydrolysis and High Solids Processing
- Enzyme Subcontract Liaison Subtask (NREL)
- Enzymatic Hydrolysis Subtask (NREL)
- Rheology and CFD Modeling Project (Univ.
Louisville)
8Bridge to Corn Ethanol Aventine/Purdue
- Objective Demonstrate conversion of residual
starch and lignocellulosic carbohydrates in wet
mill corn fiber - Work has progressed from bench scale to in-plant
pilot-scale testing over 5 years (with
technoeconomic analysis guidance) - Simple, low cost approach that readily integrates
into existing wet mill - Economic risks mitigated by integrating into
existing commercial facility - Bench scale results and economic analysis
decision points indicated sufficient potential to
proceed to in-plant pilot testing at Aventine - Broad multidisciplinary collaboration involving
Aventine, Purdue, NREL, USDA, Illinois Corn
Marketing Board
9Bridge to Corn Ethanol Aventine/Purdue
- Technical challenges focused on process
validation at scale and equipment performance - Material handling and heat transfer have proven
challenging - Slurry viscosity spikes during initial heat-up,
then falls during pretreatment - Process robustness not yet validated for extended
continuous operation - Modifications to heat exchanger, pump, and
centrifuge underway to enable more reliable
operation
10Forest Biorefinery--Hemicellulose Extraction
- Objective Partially extract hemicellulose prior
to chemical or thermomechanical pulping while
retaining pulp quality - Solubilize enough sugars to permit economically
viable ethanol production - Limit risks by focusing on key issues of
hemicellulosic sugar recovery yields and pulp
properties - Address other RD issues later (e.g., oligomer
conversion, acetic acid recovery, fermentation) - Initial milestones on sugar yields and potential
ethanol economics look attractive under certain
scenarios (strongly influenced by assumptions
about utility and enzyme costs) - Some issues concerning pulp quality identified
(that are being addressed by USDA FPL and
academic participants in Agenda 2020 consortium) - Results to inform a go-no go decision for a
Stage 3 cost-shared industry-led consortium
project
11Forest Biorefinery--Hemicellulose Extraction
- Completed a series of hemicellulose extractions
at various conditions for maple and spruce chips - Preliminary economic analysis for ethanol
production conducted - Extracted chips supplied to the USDAs Forest
Product Lab to evaluate pulp quality
Recirculating Chip Extractor
12Exploratory (Pretreatment) Saccharification
- Objective Understand biomass ultrastructure
effects - Pretreatment catalyst transport (corn stem as a
model) - Identify required enzyme activities as a function
of pretreatment approach - Enable a less severe pretreatment that achieves
high sugar yields - Highly integrated with other subtasks in
Pretreatment Enzymatic Hydrolysis and Targeted
Conversion tasks - Feedstock Qualification subtask generates
pretreated samples from different feedstock types
across a range of pretreatment pHs/severities - Joint milestone with Plant Cell Wall
Deconstruction subtask (9/05) - Leveraging CAFI 2 comparative pretreatment
project - Accessing progressively pretreated samples to
understand how composition and structure change
as pretreatment proceeds (effect on enzyme
loading and required enzyme activities)
13Exploratory (Pretreatment) Saccharification
Enzyme Augmentation Studies on ARP (CAFI)
Pretreated Corn Stover
Surface Ultrastructure Changes Upon Dilute Acid
Pretreatment
Corn stem xylem No pretreatment
Corn stem xylem 1.5 H2SO4,150oC, 20 min
14Feedstock Qualification
- Objective Develop and apply a method for
screening pretreatment pH and severity effects
across feedstock types - Generate comparative pretreatment reactivity data
for stakeholders - Do not attempt to optimize performance of
specific pretreatment processes - Select feedstocks (beyond stover) based on
Billion Ton study results - Switchgrass
- Wheat straw
- Representative forest biomass feedstock
- Complements other activities in Biochemical
Platform - CAFI (broad reactivity screening as compared to
specific pretreatment process optimization) - Exploratory Saccharification/Plant Cell Wall
Deconstruction - Sugar Processing Integration (platform for future
integration of feedstock/pretreatment/enzyme
combinations)
15Feedstock Qualification
Initial Findings on Switchgrass Across Wide pH
Range
- Standard methodology for pretreatment and
enzymatic saccharification developed - Initial data on switchgrass generated
MultiClave 10-Well Reactor
Sand Baths for Reactor Heating
16Integration of Leading Biomass Pretreatments
(CAFI 2)
- Objective Develop comparative performance data
and process economics on selected leading
pretreatment approaches using - Common feedstocks
- Standardized enzymes
- Identical procedures for sample analysis
- Consistent methods for economic analyses, i.e.,
for material and energy balancing and process
cost estimation - Build off of USDA-funded CAFI 1 project into
new areas - Corn stover and hybrid poplar feedstocks
- Enzyme activities and loadings matched to
pretreated feedstocks - Hydrolyzate fermentability at relevant sugar
concentrations - Rigor of economic models (esp. pretreatment area
capital costs) - Generate progressively pretreated samples
- Facilitate core OBP RD in the Exploratory
Saccharification and Plant Cell Wall
Deconstruction subtasks
17Integration of Leading Biomass Pretreatments
(CAFI 2)
Comparative Sugar Yields and Process Economics
from CAFI 1 Data
AFEX
1.75
Dilute Acid
Hot Water
ARP
Lime
Flow-through
1.50
MESP, /gal EtOH
1.25
1.00
Dilute Acid
Hot Water
AFEX
ARP
Lime
w/o Oligomer Credit
w/ Oligomer Credit
Initial Findings from CAFI 2 Project
- Hybrid poplar is more difficult to effectively
pretreat and saccharify - Especially for alkaline pretreatments
- Commercial xylanase addition can result in higher
xylose AND glucose yields at same overall protein
loading as cellulase only enzyme cocktail - Especially for alkaline and neutral pretreatments
- Process modeling updates underway (initial
milestone in June, 2006)
18Enzyme Subcontract Liaison
- Objective Support and validate enzyme cost
reduction by enzyme manufacturers (Novozymes and
Genencor) - Supply standard substrate (dilute acid
pretreated corn stover, PCS) - Develop cost metric to translate performance into
economic terms, i.e., enzyme cost (/gallon EtOH) - Experimentally validate improved enzyme
performance - Review/Audit achievements in reducing enzyme
production costs - Contracts with two enzyme companies reduces risk
- Different approaches, different means of
achieving cost reduction - Improved enzyme production economics
- Improved specific activity
- NREL improvements to high solids, dilute acid
pretreatment process contributed to enzyme cost
reduction
19Enzyme Subcontract Liaison
Pretreated Corn Stover (PCS) Substrate
Improvements
Improved Enzyme Preparation on Pretreated Corn
Stover (PCS)
100
100
90
90
80
80
70
70
Cellulose Conversion
60
60
50
Cellulose Conversion
50
40
Benchmark prep
Improved PCS
40
30
Improved prep
30
Original PCS
20
Benchmark prep
20
Improved prep
10
10
0
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
Soluble Protein Loading (mg protein/g cellulose)
Soluble Protein Loading (mg protein/g cellulose)
- Enzyme Subcontract Liaison activities completed
in FY05 - Verified reduction of cellulase costs to less the
0.20/gallon EtOH (per enzyme cost metric) for
both Novozymes and Genencor - 20-30X improvement from starting benchmark
20Enzymatic Hydrolysis
- Objective Develop processing knowledge to
enable high solids enzymatic saccharification - Understand impacts of background sugars and other
inhibitors - Characterize rheology and mixing characteristics
of high solid slurries to facilitate design of
commercial equipment - Identify commercial reactor systems and develop
cost information - Will test whole slurry conversion using advanced
enzymes - Evaluate solid phase properties during hydrolysis
(particle size, crystallinity, rheology, pore
size distribution) and relate to kinetics - Investigate fundamental factors affecting
rheology - Identify promising commercial reactor systems
21Enzymatic Hydrolysis
High solids processing can significantly reduce
capital and operating costs
Testing a High Solids Bioreactor (HSBR) and
comparing to fed batch solids addition to a
stirred tank bioreactor
25 solids before hydrolysis begins
22Rheology and CFD ModelingUniv. Louisville
- Objective Use Computational Fluid Dynamics
(CFD) modeling to improve design of pretreatment,
saccharification, and fermentation reactors - High solids conditions
- Changes in insoluble solids level and slurry
viscosity as pretreatment and enzymatic
hydrolysis reactions proceed - Initial project investigated
- Viscosity of biomass slurries
- CFD modeling of pretreatment reactors and stirred
tank bioreactors - Detoxification of pretreatment hydrolyzates
(activated carbon) - Current project focusing on
- High solids enzymatic processing strategies
- CFD simulations of pretreatment/hydrolysis
reactors - Measurement of changes in rheological properties
23Rheology and CFD ModelingUniv. Louisville
CFD Simulations of Stirred Tank Bioreactor at
Different Scales
CFD Simulations of High Solids Pretreatment
Reactor (Varying Screw Conveyor Design)
Interrupted Flight Conveyor
Conical Bottom-Lift Conveyor
24Interim Stage Gate Overview
- Most Recent Review
- Pretreatment Core RD Stage Gate Review
- June 9-10, 2005 (Golden, CO)
- Other Recent Relevant Reviews
- May 2003 Advanced Pretreatment Interim Stage A
Review - May 2003 Enzyme Sugar Platform Interim Stage B
Review - November 2003 Office of the Biomass Program Peer
Review - May 2004 Fundamentals and New Concepts Interim
Stage A Review - September 2004 Sugar Processing Integration
Interim Stage B Review
25Interim Stage Gate Overview
- Pretreatment Core RD Stage Gate Review
- Covered all 8 FY05 projects in Pretreatment Core
RD Area - June 9-10, 2005 (Golden, CO)
- Reviewers
- Academia
- Sharon Shoemaker UC Davis
- Michael Penner Oregon State University
- Industry
- Bob Wooley Nature Works
- Pat Smith Dow
- Government (DOE)
- Amy Miranda Biomass Program (HQ)
- Andy Trenka Biomass Program Project Management
Center (Golden) - David Thomassen Office of Science (HQ)
26Reviewer CommentsOverall Assessment
- Strengths
- Goals are relevant, realistic and well managed
with stage gate disciplines. - Focus on critical issues/challenges. Use of
merit-based research. Strong sense of team
approach to problem solving. - Great researchers, dedicated. Great facilities.
- Weaknesses
- Too few resources due to too little funding. DOE
is not aggressive enough to terminate projects
that dont meet milestones. - Funding inadequate. Not clear that major pilot
scheduled for FY08 (?) will have an adequate
knowledge base from basic RD to have the desired
impact or to contribute the desired progress. - Suggested additions/deletions to improve the
portfolio - Collaborations for the surface characterization
group with academics (to come up to speed fast)
would be valuable. - Collaborations with knowledgeable groups on the
surface characterization lab. Great facility,
eager learners and smart people at NREL, but
there are experience knowledgeable people
elsewhere too, who would love to help.
27Reviewer CommentsSpecific Projects
- Detailed, specific comments were provided to all
8 projects in the Pretreatment Core RD area - Will soon be available at http//www.eere.energy.g
ov/biomass/progs/biogeneral/obp_gate/pehindex.html
- Specific recommendation to focus on three key
areas - Surface characterization
- High solids enzymatic saccharification
- Pretreatment and saccharification across
feedstock categories
28DOE Response
- Final review panel report from June, 2005
Pretreatment Core RD Interim Stage Gate Review
recently received - 45 pages, with scoring and specific comments on
all 8 projects - DOE response to reviewer comments is now underway
- Plan to have an official response document
completed in January, 2006 - FY06 AOP has been drafted with consideration to
initial review panel feedback - A more focused plan in FY06
- Surface characterization
- High solids enzyme saccharification
- Pretreatment and saccharification across
feedstock categories
29Summary and Future Work
- Two projects completed in FY05 (no further work
in FY06) - Forest BiorefineryHemicellulose Extraction (as
core RD activity) - Enzyme Subcontract Liaison
- FY06 Activities on Specific Projects
- Bridge to Corn Ethanol Project (Purdue/Aventine)
- Complete pilot testing of system with modified
heat exchanger design - Exploratory Saccharification Subtask
- Surface characterization Evaluate lignin
re-arrangement effects across different
pretreatment approaches (CAFI, Feedstock
Qualification, also Processing Integration Task
samples) - Enzyme augmentation studies Effect of specific
non-cellulase components on CAFI and Feedstock
Qualification pretreated samples
30Summary and Future Work
- FY06 Activities on Specific Projects (cont.)
- Integrate Leading Biomass Pretreatments (CAFI 2
Project) - Pretreatment and saccharification studies on
poplar feedstock - Complete development of updated process economic
models - Feedstock Qualification
- Complete pretreatment pH and severity screening
study of two feedstocks (switchgrass, wheat
straw)ties to FY06 Joule milestone - 3rd feedstock in FY07 (representative forest
residue) - Enzymatic Hydrolysis
- Continue to develop high solids saccharification
(includes advancing rheology and reactor design
studies) - Test advanced cellulase preparations under
process relevant conditions (high solids,
background sugars, hydrolyzate inhibitors) - Rheology and CFD Modeling Project (Univ.
Louisville) - CFD simulations of high solids pretreatment and
saccharification reactor designs