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Biorefineries International status quo and future directions Ed de Jong / Rene van Ree
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Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Jan 02, 2017

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Page 1: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Biorefineries –

International status quo and future directions

Ed de Jong / Rene van Ree

Page 2: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Contents

1. Biobased Economy2. Biorefineries - Definition3. Biorefineries - Categories4. Biorefineries - Objective5. Biorefineries - Products6. Biorefineries - Systems7. Biorefineries - Systems revisited8. Conclusions

Page 3: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

The biobased economy

Closing the loop:No waste & CO2 - neutral.

Drivers:

• Kyoto• Security of supply• Agricultural

policies• Sustainability• Economics

Page 4: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

1 million ton Specialties

2 to 3 billion tonWood and composites

1 billion ton for 0.3 billion top productChemical industry

10 billion ton equivalent to 160 EJEnergy

10 billion ton biomass for 3 billion ton foodFood / Feed

Current production 170 billion ton biomass of which 6 billion ton is used:1,8 grains2,2 other food (sugar, vegetables, starch, etc.)2 wood0,01 other non-food

World Biomass demand in 2050

Page 5: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

The New Biomass value chain: a new € - game

Food

Biomass production

1st Agro logistics Food pretreatment Food productionFoodconversion

Existingnon- food:• Feed• Additives• Compost• Fibres• Waste management.

Biomass sourcesAgro-food productionBy products & waste

Logistics&storageNL productionImports

Existing conversion Existing production

BiobasedProducts• Biobasedmaterials• Bio-based

chemicals• Bio-fuels• Bio-energy

New productionPerformance materialsBase&platform chemicalsPerformance chemicalsBio Energy

New Pre-treatment & conversion

physical&chemical conversion

process engineering

bioconversion

Page 6: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Comparison of the basic-principles of the petroleum refinery and the biorefinery

Page 7: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Biorefinery Definitions

• NREL: A biorefinery is a facility that integrates biomass conversion processes and equipment to produce fuels, power, and value-added chemicals from biomass. The biorefinery concept is analogous to today's petroleum refinery, which produce multiple fuels and products from petroleum. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biorefinery

• Cluster of biobased industries producing chemicals, fuels, power, products, and materials.www.biorenew.iastate.edu/resources/glossary.php

• US-DOE: A biorefinery is an overall concept of a processing plant where biomass feedstocks are converted and extracted into a spectrum of valuable products

• NL: The separation of biomass into distinct components which can be individually brought to the market either directly after separation or after further (biological, thermochemical/chemical) treatment(s)

• Shell: Addition of Pure Plant Oil into traditional oil refineries

Page 8: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Schematic overview of a general Biorefinery concept

Page 9: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Which Products ?

• Chemicals• Fuels• Power & Heat

- All Biorefineries should become Heat and may be power independent

• Materials (Fibres, Starch, Wood)- Can be important (economic) products but are by itself

outside the Biorefinery definition• Food and Feed

- Can be important (economic) products but are by itself outside the Biorefinery definition

• Ashes, CO2, H2O, ….

Page 10: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307
Page 11: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307
Page 12: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Biorefinery Categories

• Generation I Biorefinery- Dry – milling bioethanol plant

• Generation II Biorefinery- Wet – milling bioethanol plant

• Generation III Biorefinery

Page 13: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Progression to the Integrated Industrial Biorefinery

Existing Starch Based Biorefineries: Wet & Dry Mills (Growth limited by co-product markets)

Increase Ethanol production by access to residual starch & increased protein in Co-products

Fractionation of the feedstock to access the

high value products prior to ethanol production

Fractionation of residues in dry mill for new co-products from lignin

Use of residues in a dry mill to increase Ethanol

production

Integrated Industrial Biorefinery multiple feedstocks fractionated

to high value products for economics & fuels production

drive scale

20102005 2020

Fractionation of grain and residues introduction of energy crops in dry mill

Biorefinery Development

Page 14: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

General objective

There is an agreement about the objective, which is briefly defined as (Kamm & Kamm 2005):

“Developed biorefineries, so called “phase III-biorefineries” or “generation III-biorefineries”, start with a biomass–feedstock-mix to produce a multiplicity of most various products by a technologies-mix”

Page 15: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Biorefinery Systems

• “lignocellulosic feedstock biorefinery” which use “nature-dry” raw material

• “whole crop biorefinery” which uses raw material such as cereals or maize

• “green biorefineries” which use “nature-wet” biomassessuch as green grass, alfalfa, clover, or immature cereal

• “biorefinery two platforms concept” includes the sugarplatform and the syngas platform

Page 16: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Lignocellulosic Feedstock Biorefinery

Cellulose‘biotech./chemical’

Fuels,Chemicals,

Polymers andMaterials

LigninRaw material

Hemicelluloses(Polyoses)

‘biotech./chemical’

Lignin‘chemical’

LignocellulosesLignocellulosic

Feedstock (LCF)

Sugar Raw material

CogenerationHeat and Power,

Extractives

Residues

Residues

Page 17: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307
Page 18: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307
Page 19: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Whole Crop Biorefinery Concept

Page 20: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Dry–milling => Whole crop => Thermochemical

Abengoa Bioenergy

Page 21: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Green Biorefinery Concept

Page 22: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Sanders, 2004

Composition of Grass

Page 23: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Pilot biorefinery line Foxhol (Groningen) (PrograssConsortium)

Green grass proteincompound feed

white grass proteinGrass protein (products)

+ .....

compound feed

Grass juice concentrate

Ethanol

Potting soil

Construction material+ paper

Polymer extrusion products

FibersGrass juice Fibers

Protein

Page 24: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Biorefinery two platforms concept

Page 25: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Biorefinery conceptA Biorefinery is an integrated facility for efficient co-production of

materials, chemicals, transportation fuels, green gasses, power and/orheat from biomass (analogeous to today’s petroleum refineries)

Organic residuesEnergy crops

Aquatic biomass

Primaryrefinery

(extraction)(separation)

Secondarythermochemical

refinery

Secondarybiochemical

refinery

Power and/orheat

production

MaterialsChemicals

Transportation fuelsGreen gasses

PowerHeat

Primaryproducts

R: residues.. power and/or heat

R

R

RR

R

gasification-based

fermentation-based

Page 26: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Thermo-chemical biorefinery concept of ECN

Gasification

CO2 removal Tar removal ”OLGA” unit

Combined Cycle

H2O

CO2

Syngas

Transportation fuels • Fischer-Tropsch diesel • MeOH • Hydrogen

Electricity& Heat

Torrefaction

Chemicals • acids • solvents

Chemical industry, sequestering, oil industry (EOR), greenhouses CO2

Aqueous scrubber

Fertiliser (NH4)2SO4

Impregnating reagentheavy tars

Solvents • benzene• toluene • xylenes

Fine chemicals light tars

Product Gas • H2 • CO • CO2 • H2O • CH4 • C2H2 & C2H4• BTX • light tars • heavy tars • NH3

Cryogenic distillation

Base chemicals • acetylene (C2H2) • ethylene (C2H4)

Gaseous fuel CH4 / SNG

Fertiliser minerals (ash)

Page 27: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

The staged catalytic biomass conversion process scheme

2 28-10-2005

Staged (catalytic) biomass degasification

Torrefaction area

180-290°C

Catalyst?

Pyrolysis area

290-600°C

Catalyst?

Gasification area

> 600°C

Catalyst?

Crude Crude Crude

Product separation and upgrading

Biomass

Base / Platform chemicals

Fuels Power Heat

Page 28: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Unclassified Biorefineries

• Side and waste streams

• Marine biorefinery

• Most generation III Biorefineries

• Consortia of different industries

Page 29: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Biorefinery Systems - Revisited

• Dry raw material versus fresh raw material processing (Storage / transportation / etc) (green versus whole crop / lignocellulosic biorefineries)

• Functionalized versus “uniform/simple”intermediates(Thermochemical versus physical/(bio)chemicaltreatments)

Page 30: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Biorefinery Systems - Revisited

4 New Categories of Biorefineries:

Fresh Functionalized (Grass etc)

Fresh Uniform (HTU)

After Storage Functionalized (Second generation lignocellulose)

After Storage Uniform (HTU / Pyrolysis / Syngas)

Page 31: Current status on Biorefineries IEA42 150307

Biorefineries –Points to be addressed

• Formation of Building Blocks should be involved

• Incorporation of Food and Feed production in Biorefineries must become clear

• Subdivision of Biorefineries can be better (Fresh After Storage; Functionalized Uniform)

• …..