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High-Efficiency Conversion of Ionic Liquid-Pretreated Woody Biomass to Ethanol at the Pilot Scale

  • Carolina A. Barcelos
  • , Asun M. Oka
  • , Jipeng Yan
  • , Lalitendu Das
  • , Ezinne C. Achinivu
  • , Harsha Magurudeniya
  • , Jie Dong
  • , Simay Akdemir
  • , Nawa Raj Baral
  • , Chunsheng Yan
  • , Corinne D. Scown
  • , Deepti Tanjore
  • , Ning Sun
  • , Blake A. Simmons
  • , John Gladden
  • , Eric Sundstrom*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

With a diverse and widely distributed global resource base, woody biomass is a compelling organic feedstock for conversion to renewable liquid fuels. In California, woody biomass comprises the largest fraction of underutilized biomass available for biofuel production, but conversion to fuels is challenged both by recalcitrance to deconstruction and by toxicity toward downstream saccharification and fermentation due to organic acids and phenolic compounds generated during pretreatment. In this study, we optimize pretreatment and scale-up of an integrated one-pot process for deconstruction of California woody biomass using the ionic liquid (IL) cholinium lysinate [Ch][Lys] as a pretreatment solvent. By evaluating the impact of solid loading, solid removal, yeast acclimatization, fermentation temperature, fermentation pH, and nutrient supplementation on final ethanol yields and titers, we achieve nearly full conversion of both glucose and xylose to ethanol with commercial C5-utilizing Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We then demonstrate process scalability in 680 L pilot-scale fermentation, achieving >80% deconstruction efficiency, >90% fermentation efficiency, 27.7 g/L ethanol titer, and >80% ethanol distillation efficiency from the IL-containing hydrolysate post fermentation. This fully integrated process requires no intermediate separations and no intermediate detoxification of the hydrolysate. Using an integrated biorefinery model, current performance results in a minimum ethanol selling price of $8.8/gge. Reducing enzyme loading along with other minor process improvements can reduce the ethanol selling price to $3/gge. This study is the largest scale demonstration of IL pretreatment and biofuel conversion known to date, and the overall biomass-to-ethanol efficiencies are the highest reported to date for any IL-based biomass-to-biofuel conversion.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)4042-4053
Number of pages12
JournalACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering
Volume9
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 22 Mar 2021
Externally publishedYes

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 7 - Affordable and Clean Energy
    SDG 7 Affordable and Clean Energy

Keywords

  • carbon footprint
  • ethanol
  • ionic liquid
  • pilot scale
  • scale-up
  • technoeconomic analysis
  • woody biomass

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