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HHMI Teachers’ Workshop: Biofuels – More Than Ethanol From Corn Starch

HHMI Teachers’ Workshop: Biofuels – More Than Ethanol From Corn Starch. Aditya Kunjapur, Ph.D. Candidate, MIT July 20, 2014. Outline. Context for biofuels and key facts Photosynthesis and carbon fixation Feedstocks Fuels Recap. Outline. Context for biofuels and key facts

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HHMI Teachers’ Workshop: Biofuels – More Than Ethanol From Corn Starch

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  1. HHMI Teachers’ Workshop:Biofuels – More Than Ethanol From Corn Starch Aditya Kunjapur, Ph.D. Candidate, MIT July 20, 2014

  2. Outline • Context for biofuels and key facts • Photosynthesis and carbon fixation • Feedstocks • Fuels • Recap

  3. Outline • Context for biofuels and key facts • Photosynthesis and carbon fixation • Feedstocks • Fuels • Recap

  4. What is “BioEnergy” According to the International Energy Agency (IEA): “Material which is directly or indirectly produced by photosynthesis and which is utilized as a feedstock in the manufacture of fuels and substitutes for petrochemical and other energy intensive products.” IEA Bioenergy: http://www.ieabioenergy.com/IEABioenergy.aspx

  5. Overview of BioEnergy Photosynthesis • Enzymatic • Same organism • Different organism • Plants • Algae • Cyanobacteria Photons Fuels or Chemicals Biomass Energy + CO2 Inorganic Molecules • Ethanol • Biodiesel • Jet Fuel • Methane Chemosynthesis • Thermochemical • Pyrolysis • Gasification • Chemolithotrophs (in deep oceans, isolated caves, etc) Energy Capture Chemical Conversion

  6. Some advantages of bioenergy compared to other renewables • The only renewable source that can replace fossil fuels in all energy markets – in the production of heat, electricity, and fuels for transport (IEA) • The source of a variety of drop-in liquid fuels • The source of petroleum in the first place • The primary way by which atmospheric CO2 is consumed

  7. Breakdown of US renewables in 2011 http://www.eia.gov/totalenergy/data/monthly/pdf/sec10_3.pdf

  8. Percentage of the world’s energy • Biomass-based energy accounted for ~10% of world total primary energy supply in 2009 • Includes cooking/heating in developing countries • Global production of biofuels: • 2000: 16 billion liters • 2011: 100+ billion liters • Total road transport fuel globally: 3% • Brazil: 23% Source: IEA

  9. Life cycle of traditional biofuels Important consideration: life cycle greenhouse gas emissions SC Opinion on Greenhouse Gas Accounting in Relation to Bioenergy: http://www.eea.europa.eu/about-us/governance/scientific-committee/sc-opinions/opinions-on-scientific-issues/ Image: http://www.extension.org/sites/default/files/w/2/22/BiofuelLifeCycle.jpg

  10. Outline • Context for biofuels and key facts • Photosynthesis and carbon fixation • Feedstocks • Fuels • Recap

  11. Photosynthesis: Overview • Oxidation/reduction (Redox) reactions • CO2 gets reduced to glucose • H2O gets oxidized to O2 Image: http://www.phschool.com/science/biology_place/biocoach/images/photosynth/photo1.gif

  12. Photosynthesis: Inside a Chloroplast Image: http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/organic/imgorg/rubc3.gif

  13. Photosystems convert light energy into reducing equivalents Image: http://www.biologycorner.com/resources/photosystem.jpg

  14. The Calvin Cycle uses those reducing equivalents to turn CO2 into sugar Image: https://benchprep.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/Calvin_cycle.jpg

  15. Typical efficiency of photosynthesis 47% Non-Bioavailable Photons 100% Sunlight 53% (in 400-700 nm range) 30% Not Absorbed 40% Loss in Dark and Photo-Respiration 68% Loss in Conversion of ATP and NADPH to glucose 37% (Absorbed Photon Energy) ~5% Net Leaf Efficiency 9% (Collected as sugar) 28% (Energy Captured in Chlorophyll) 24% Wavelength Mismatch Figure based on statistics listed here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photosynthetic_efficiency

  16. Outline • Context for biofuels and key facts • Photosynthesis and carbon fixation • Feedstocks • Fuels • Recap

  17. Feedstocks Two categories of photosynthetic organisms: • Those that capture light energy into non-fuel biomass - Chemical conversion still required • Those that capture light energy and produce a fuel - Only physical separation required Image: http://www1.eere.energy.gov/biomass/images/Feedstock1.jpg

  18. Estimated corn use for ethanol production (2011): 4.9 billion bushels or 279 billion pounds Image: http://ericpetersautos.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/corn-1.gif Source of facts: EIA – Biofuel Trends and Issues – Oct 2012

  19. Drawbacks of Corn as a Feedstock • Used for food • Grows slowly • Grows only on arable land • Provides low energy per acre • Is an annual crop Image: http://media.treehugger.com/assets/images/2011/10/bushcorn-jj-001.jpg http://www.shirkebiofuels.com/images/biofuel-feedstock.gif

  20. Can grow up to 8 feet in 6 weeks Image: http://newswire.uark.edu/images/miscanthus.JPG

  21. Energy yield per acre does not favor corn ? Source: “Biodiesel from microalgae.” http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0734975007000262#

  22. Bioreactors/ponds used to grow algae Bioreactors required to cultivate high cell densities Images: http://www.inventgeek.com/Projects/Photo-Bio-reactor-V2/main.jpg http://assets.inhabitat.com/files/bioreactor1.jpg ;

  23. Bioreactors/ponds used to grow algae • Algal cells make up very small fraction of pond • Dewatering and processing is cost-prohibitive Images: both from http://www.asulightworks.com/blog/asu-and-ua-team-arid-raceway-algae-test-bed

  24. Cellulose

  25. I Gelfandet al. Nature000, 1-4 (2013) doi:10.1038/nature11811

  26. Cellulosic biofuel – a reality?

  27. Outline • Context for biofuels and key facts • Photosynthesis and carbon fixation • Feedstocks • Fuels • Recap

  28. Pathway to ethanol Under anaerobic conditions (no O2): Glycolysis (~10 enzymatic reactions) Pyruvatedecarboxylase Alcohol dehydrogenase Image: http://www.emc.maricopa.edu/faculty/farabee/biobk/alcferm.gif

  29. Drawbacks of ethanol • Hygroscopic • Miscible with water • Low energy density • Requires different distribution system than gasoline • Limit to how much can be added to conventional engines

  30. The E10 “Blend Wall”

  31. Alternative fuel options • Longer, branched alcohols • Biodiesel • Methane • Methanogens • CO2 + 4H2 CH4 + 2H2O • Important for waste-to-energy Image: http://canola.ab.ca/image.axd/images/uploads/news/bio_pump_200x250.jpg?m=Crop&w=200

  32. Images: (Left) http://www2.raritanval.edu/departments/Science/full-time/Weber/Microbiology%20Majors/Chpater5/chapter5sub/figure_05_30_labeled.jpg

  33. Outline • Context for biofuels and key facts • Photosynthesis and carbon fixation • Feedstocks • Fuels • Recap

  34. Overview of BioEnergy Photosynthesis • Enzymatic • Same organism • Different organism • Plants • Algae • Cyanobacteria Photons Fuels or Chemicals Biomass Energy + CO2 Inorganic Molecules • Ethanol • Biodiesel • Jet Fuel • Methane Chemosynthesis • Thermochemical • Pyrolysis • Gasification • Chemolithotrophs (in deep oceans, isolated caves, etc) Energy Capture Chemical Conversion

  35. Recap and take home points • Traditional biofuels have several drawbacks • When evaluating a biofuel process, consider: • Carbon lifecycle • Food versus fuel • Land (or water) required • Feedstock transportation • Desired end fuel • Research efforts directed toward production of advanced and cellulosic biofuels make most sense(just my opinion!)

  36. Thank you for listening! Questions?

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