Techno-economic analysis of an integrated biorefinery to convert poplar into jet fuel, xylitol, and formic acid

Abstract Background The overall goal of the present study is to investigate the economics of an integrated biorefinery converting hybrid poplar into jet fuel, xylitol, and formic acid. The process employs a combination of integrated biological, thermochemical, and electrochemical conversion pathways...

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Main Authors: Gabriel V. S. Seufitelli, Hisham El-Husseini, Danielle U. Pascoli, Renata Bura, Richard Gustafson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2022-12-01
Series:Biotechnology for Biofuels and Bioproducts
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13068-022-02246-3
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author Gabriel V. S. Seufitelli
Hisham El-Husseini
Danielle U. Pascoli
Renata Bura
Richard Gustafson
author_facet Gabriel V. S. Seufitelli
Hisham El-Husseini
Danielle U. Pascoli
Renata Bura
Richard Gustafson
author_sort Gabriel V. S. Seufitelli
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background The overall goal of the present study is to investigate the economics of an integrated biorefinery converting hybrid poplar into jet fuel, xylitol, and formic acid. The process employs a combination of integrated biological, thermochemical, and electrochemical conversion pathways to convert the carbohydrates in poplar into jet fuel, xylitol, and formic acid production. The C5-sugars are converted into xylitol via hydrogenation. The C6-sugars are converted into jet fuel via fermentation into ethanol, followed by dehydration, oligomerization, and hydrogenation into jet fuel. CO2 produced during fermentation is converted into formic acid via electrolysis, thus, avoiding emissions and improving the process’s overall carbon conversion. Results Three different biorefinery scales are considered: small, intermediate, and large, assuming feedstock supplies of 150, 250, and 760 dry ktonne of poplar/year, respectively. For the intermediate-scale biorefinery, a minimum jet fuel selling price of $3.13/gallon was obtained at a discount rate of 15%. In a favorable scenario where the xylitol price is 25% higher than its current market value, a jet fuel selling price of $0.64/gallon was obtained. Co-locating the biorefinery with a power plant reduces the jet fuel selling price from $3.13 to $1.03 per gallon. Conclusion A unique integrated biorefinery to produce jet fuel was successfully modeled. Analysis of the biorefinery scales shows that the minimum jet fuel selling price for profitability decreases with increasing biorefinery scale, and for all scales, the biorefinery presents favorable economics, leading to a minimum jet fuel selling price lower than the current price for sustainable aviation fuel (SAF). The amount of xylitol and formic produced in a large-scale facility corresponds to 43% and 25%, respectively, of the global market volume of these products. These volumes will saturate the markets, making them infeasible scenarios. In contrast, the small and intermediate-scale biorefineries have product volumes that would not saturate current markets, does not present a feedstock availability problem, and produce jet fuel at a favorable price given the current SAF policy support. It is shown that the price of co-products greatly influences the minimum selling price of jet fuel, and co-location can further reduce the price of jet fuel.
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spelling doaj.art-d11441de95ec4ebd9ec316ec4b2c132e2022-12-25T12:08:03ZengBMCBiotechnology for Biofuels and Bioproducts2731-36542022-12-0115111410.1186/s13068-022-02246-3Techno-economic analysis of an integrated biorefinery to convert poplar into jet fuel, xylitol, and formic acidGabriel V. S. Seufitelli0Hisham El-Husseini1Danielle U. Pascoli2Renata Bura3Richard Gustafson4School of Environmental and Forest Sciences, University of WashingtonSchool of Environmental and Forest Sciences, University of WashingtonSchool of Environmental and Forest Sciences, University of WashingtonSchool of Environmental and Forest Sciences, University of WashingtonSchool of Environmental and Forest Sciences, University of WashingtonAbstract Background The overall goal of the present study is to investigate the economics of an integrated biorefinery converting hybrid poplar into jet fuel, xylitol, and formic acid. The process employs a combination of integrated biological, thermochemical, and electrochemical conversion pathways to convert the carbohydrates in poplar into jet fuel, xylitol, and formic acid production. The C5-sugars are converted into xylitol via hydrogenation. The C6-sugars are converted into jet fuel via fermentation into ethanol, followed by dehydration, oligomerization, and hydrogenation into jet fuel. CO2 produced during fermentation is converted into formic acid via electrolysis, thus, avoiding emissions and improving the process’s overall carbon conversion. Results Three different biorefinery scales are considered: small, intermediate, and large, assuming feedstock supplies of 150, 250, and 760 dry ktonne of poplar/year, respectively. For the intermediate-scale biorefinery, a minimum jet fuel selling price of $3.13/gallon was obtained at a discount rate of 15%. In a favorable scenario where the xylitol price is 25% higher than its current market value, a jet fuel selling price of $0.64/gallon was obtained. Co-locating the biorefinery with a power plant reduces the jet fuel selling price from $3.13 to $1.03 per gallon. Conclusion A unique integrated biorefinery to produce jet fuel was successfully modeled. Analysis of the biorefinery scales shows that the minimum jet fuel selling price for profitability decreases with increasing biorefinery scale, and for all scales, the biorefinery presents favorable economics, leading to a minimum jet fuel selling price lower than the current price for sustainable aviation fuel (SAF). The amount of xylitol and formic produced in a large-scale facility corresponds to 43% and 25%, respectively, of the global market volume of these products. These volumes will saturate the markets, making them infeasible scenarios. In contrast, the small and intermediate-scale biorefineries have product volumes that would not saturate current markets, does not present a feedstock availability problem, and produce jet fuel at a favorable price given the current SAF policy support. It is shown that the price of co-products greatly influences the minimum selling price of jet fuel, and co-location can further reduce the price of jet fuel.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13068-022-02246-3PoplarBiorefineryTechno-economic analysisSustainable aviation fuelJet fuelFormic acid
spellingShingle Gabriel V. S. Seufitelli
Hisham El-Husseini
Danielle U. Pascoli
Renata Bura
Richard Gustafson
Techno-economic analysis of an integrated biorefinery to convert poplar into jet fuel, xylitol, and formic acid
Biotechnology for Biofuels and Bioproducts
Poplar
Biorefinery
Techno-economic analysis
Sustainable aviation fuel
Jet fuel
Formic acid
title Techno-economic analysis of an integrated biorefinery to convert poplar into jet fuel, xylitol, and formic acid
title_full Techno-economic analysis of an integrated biorefinery to convert poplar into jet fuel, xylitol, and formic acid
title_fullStr Techno-economic analysis of an integrated biorefinery to convert poplar into jet fuel, xylitol, and formic acid
title_full_unstemmed Techno-economic analysis of an integrated biorefinery to convert poplar into jet fuel, xylitol, and formic acid
title_short Techno-economic analysis of an integrated biorefinery to convert poplar into jet fuel, xylitol, and formic acid
title_sort techno economic analysis of an integrated biorefinery to convert poplar into jet fuel xylitol and formic acid
topic Poplar
Biorefinery
Techno-economic analysis
Sustainable aviation fuel
Jet fuel
Formic acid
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13068-022-02246-3
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