Sustainability assessment of glucose production technologies from highly recalcitrant softwood including scavengers
Journal article, 2017

The utilization of abandoned lignocellulosic residues for chemical production has a strong potential to partially substitute chemicals, which are traditionally produced from non-renewable resources. Softwood especially, with its high availability, presents a sustainable resource for the conversion to higher value-added products such as biofuels and bioplastics. In this study, we investigate mature and innovative technologies for the conversion of softwood to the platform chemical sugar from an economic and environmental perspective. We show that the conventional enzymatic hydrolysis has high economic as well as environmental burdens and that the increase of enzyme availability via a carbocation scavenger process is the key solution to overcome them. Furthermore, we present a process design based on concentrated acid hydrolysis, which is both environmentally and economically competitive compared to conventional production from sugarbeet. The low energy and raw material requirements combined with heat integration and moderate capital costs makes this technology attractive for utilization of softwood residues. This proves that lignocellulosic residues have the potential to become an important raw material in the future bioeconomy.

life cycle assessment

economic evaluation

softwood

biorefinery

scavengers

pre-treatment technologies

process design

Author

Merten Morales

ETH Zurich

Thomas Pielhop

ETH Zurich

Philippe Saliba

ETH Zurich

K. Hungerbühler

ETH Zurich

Philipp Rudolf von Rohr

ETH Zurich

Stavros Papadokonstantakis

Chalmers, Energy and Environment, Energy Technology

Biofuels, Bioproducts and Biorefining

1932-104X (ISSN)

Vol. 11 3 441-453

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Chemical Process Engineering

DOI

10.1002/bbb.1756

More information

Created

10/8/2017