Life cycle assessment and life cycle costing of conventional and modified dilute acid pretreatment for fuel ethanol production from rice straw in India

被引:42
作者
Soam, Shveta [1 ]
Kapoor, Manali [1 ]
Kumar, Ravindra [1 ]
Gupta, Ravi P. [1 ]
Puri, Suresh K. [1 ]
Ramakumar, S. S. V. [2 ]
机构
[1] Indian Oil Corp Ltd, Ctr Res & Dev, DBT IOC Ctr Adv Bioenergy Res, Sect 13, Faridabad 121007, India
[2] Indian Oil Corp Ltd, Ctr Res & Dev, Sect 13, Faridabad 121007, India
关键词
Ethanol; Dilute acid pretreatment; Extraction; Alkali; Life cycle assessment; Life cycle costing; BIOETHANOL PRODUCTION; ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT; BIOFUEL PRODUCTION; LIGNOCELLULOSIC FEEDSTOCK; TRANSPORTATION FUEL; WHEAT-STRAW; RESIDUES; ENERGY; SUSTAINABILITY; SUGARCANE;
D O I
10.1016/j.jclepro.2018.06.204
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Dilute acid (DA) pretreatment results in the formation of inhibitory compounds and pseudo-lignin along with the burden of unnecessary materials like ash, extractive, lignin or their condensed products that reduces the conversion efficiency of cellulose to monomeric sugar. Indian Oil Corporation Limited (IOCL) has developed a modified pretreatment (MP) in order to reduce the enzyme dosage during ethanol production. This method uses extraction of biomass in water and varying alkali concentration of 0.2, 0.4 and 0.5%, prior to pretreatment as a strategy to reduce the enzyme dosage and improve the ethanol yield. The environmental and economic impact of these MP scenarios in comparison with conventional pretreatment (CP) is studied. The ethanol production increases from 218 to 267 L using MP. The introduction of extraction step prior to DA pretreatment fulfills the objective of reducing enzyme dosage by 23-39%. However, overall life cycle assessment (LCA) results revealed that performance of MP2, MP3 and MP4 is on a negative side in all the environmental impact categories as compared to CP due to the use of alkali, where a huge amount of emissions are released during the production stage. Overall, MP1 using water as a media for extraction is the most environmentally suitable pretreatment process for ethanol production. Life cycle costing (LCC) results showed that cost of 1 L ethanol production could be lowered down from 0.87 to 0.70 United States Dollar (USD) using MP1 scenario. From an environment and economic perspective, it is recommended to use only water as an extraction media for biomass, as this can reduce the enzyme dosage, emissions and cost. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:732 / 741
页数:10
相关论文
共 37 条
[11]  
GOI (Government of India), 2009, NAT POL BIOF
[12]  
Heijungs R., 1992, Environmental Life Cycle Assessment of Products: Guide and Backgrounds
[13]  
Hong Y., 2011, BIOFUEL BIOPROD BIOR, V7, P303
[14]  
IEA, 2015, TRANSP EN CO2
[15]   Influence of high gravity process conditions on the environmental impact of ethanol production from wheat straw [J].
Janssen, Matty ;
Tillman, Anne-Marie ;
Cannella, David ;
Jorgensen, Henning .
BIORESOURCE TECHNOLOGY, 2014, 173 :148-158
[16]   Impact of Conditioning Prior to Dilute Acid Deconstruction of Biomass for the Production of Fermentable Sugars [J].
Kapoor, Manali ;
Soam, Shveta ;
Semwal, Surbhi ;
Gupta, Ravi P. ;
Kumar, Ravindra ;
Tuli, Deepak K. .
ACS SUSTAINABLE CHEMISTRY & ENGINEERING, 2017, 5 (05) :4285-4292
[17]   Pilot scale dilute acid pretreatment of rice straw and fermentable sugar recovery at high solid loadings [J].
Kapoor, Manali ;
Soam, Shveta ;
Agrawal, Ruchi ;
Gupta, Ravi P. ;
Tuli, Deepak K. ;
Kumar, Ravindra .
BIORESOURCE TECHNOLOGY, 2017, 224 :688-693
[18]  
Karlsson H, 2014, J CLEAN PROD, V83, P420, DOI [10.1016/j.jclepro.2014.07.029, 10.1016/]
[19]  
Kazi F.Kabir., 2010, Techno-Economic Analysis of Biochemical Scenarios for Production of Cellulosic Ethanol Techno-Economic Analysis of Biochemical Scenarios for Production of Cellulosic Ethanol
[20]   Impact of pretreatment and downstream processing technologies on economics and energy in cellulosic ethanol production [J].
Kumar, Deepak ;
Murthy, Ganti S. .
BIOTECHNOLOGY FOR BIOFUELS, 2011, 4