بیوتکنولوژی صنعتی Industrial Biotechnology

این وبلاگ محلی برای به اشتراک گذاردن یافته ها و دانسته های علوم بیوتکنولوژیست

بیوتکنولوژی صنعتی Industrial Biotechnology

این وبلاگ محلی برای به اشتراک گذاردن یافته ها و دانسته های علوم بیوتکنولوژیست

Engineering of Biofuel Plant

 

Computer monitor showing plans for an ICM-designed ethanol plant.ICM, Inc., engineers discuss plans for an ethanol plant under construction.

 

Recently designers  work to understand Their customers’ needs, then make it their mission to deliver guaranteed solutions to meet them. That’s why they offer turnkey solutions based on a full-service, best-value engineering approach, whether you’re building a new facility or expanding an existing plant.

their licensed, professional engineers design customized solutions to meet their customers’ unique requirements then see them through fabrication, installation, construction, training, startup, and testing.

They have extensive experience operating ethanol plants, including process design, operations management, and environmental compliance. They even offer a comprehensive menu of professional engineering services designed to take their customer from initial concept studies and design through operational training and startup.

25% Less Piping

New designed plants use 25% less pipe than other plants, reducing the risk of bacterial contamination, making pipes easier to access, and lowering costs.

Batch Processing

 batch processing, as opposed to continual processing, plant operators can clean pipes and tanks after each batch has been processed. As a result, the risk of bacterial contamination is reduced, and beer columns require less cleaning.

 Evaporation/Distillation Process

Designer`s proprietary evaporation/distillation process should  results in a  energy reduction, because heat is shared between the units

Operationally Friendly Design

Nothing is more frustrating than a high-tech gadget that’s impossible to operate. designers took this into consideration when designing their easy-to-use DCS systems and control panels

24-Hour Plant Support

Along with unparalleled service during plant design and construction phases, every designer is supposed to keep its plants up and running 24 hours a day, 7 days a week

Ethanol Production Process-2

Delivery of harvested corn arriving at ICM-designed ethanol plant.Interior of ICM-designed ethanol fuel plant. ICM is a worldwide leader in ethanol fuel technology and ethanol production.Exterior of ICM-designed ethanol fuel plant. ICM-designed plants utilize a dry mill process for ethanol production.

Ethanol Production Process

  Ethanol is commercially produced in one of two ways, using either the wet mill or dry mill process. Wet milling involves separating the grain kernel into its component parts (germ, fiber, protein, and starch) prior to fermentation. ICM-designed plants utilize the dry mill process, where the entire grain kernel is ground into flour. The starch in the flour is converted to ethanol during the fermentation process, creating carbon dioxide and distillers grain

Delivery/Storage

Grain is delivered by truck or rail to the ethanol plant where it’s loaded in storage bins designed to hold enough grain to supply the plant for 7–10 days.

Milling

The grain is screened to remove debris and ground into course flour.

Cooking )Hot Slurry, Primary Liquefaction, and Secondary Liquefaction)

During the cook process, the starch in the flour is physically and chemically prepared for fermentation

Hot Slurry

The milled grain is mixed with process water, the pH is adjusted to about 5.8, and an alpha-amylase enzyme is added. The slurry is heated to 180–190°F for 30–45 minutes to reduce viscosity.

Primary Liquefaction

The slurry is then pumped through a pressurized jet cooker at 221°F and held for 5 minutes. The mixture is then cooled by an atmospheric or vacuum flash condenser.

Secondary Liquefaction

After the flash condensation cooling, the mixture is held for 1–2 hours at 180–190°F to give the alpha-amylase enzyme time to break down the starch into short chain dextrins.

After pH and temperature adjustment, a second enzyme, glucoamylase, is added as the mixture is pumped into the fermentation tanks.

Simultaneous Saccharification Fermentation

Once inside the fermentation tanks, the mixture is referred to as mash. The glucoamylase enzyme breaks down the dextrins to form simple sugars. Yeast is added to convert the sugar to ethanol and carbon dioxide. The mash is then allowed to ferment for 50–60 hours, resulting in a mixture that contains about 15% ethanol as well as the solids from the grain and added yeast.

Distillation

The fermented mash is pumped into a multi-column distillation system where additional heat is added. The columns utilize the differences in the boiling points of ethanol and water to boil off and separate the ethanol. By the time the product stream is ready to leave the distillation columns, it contains about 95% ethanol by volume (190-proof). The residue from this process, called stillage, contains non-fermentable solids and water and is pumped out from the bottom of the columns into the centrifuges.

Dehydration

The 190-proof ethanol still contains about 5% water. It’s passed through a molecular sieve to physically separate the remaining water from the ethanol based on the different sizes of the molecules. This step produces 200-proof anhydrous (waterless) ethanol.

Ethanol Storage

Before the ethanol is sent to storage tanks, a small amount of denaturant is added, making it unfit for human consumption. Most ethanol plants’ storage tanks are sized to allow storage of 7–10 days’ production capacity.

Co-Product Processing

During the ethanol production process, two valuable co-products are created: carbon dioxide and distillers grains.

As yeast ferment the sugar, they release large amounts of carbon dioxide gas. It can be released into the atmosphere, but it’s commonly captured and purified with a scrubber so it can be marketed to the food processing industry for use in carbonated beverages and flash-freezing applications.

The stillage from the bottom of the distillation tanks contains solids from the grain and added yeast as well as liquid from the water added during the process. It’s sent to centrifuges for separation into thin stillage (a liquid with 5–10% solids) and wet distillers grain.

Some of the thin stillage is routed back to the cook/slurry tanks as makeup water, reducing the amount of fresh water required by the cook process. The rest is sent through a multiple-effect evaporation system where it is concentrated into syrup containing 25–50% solids. This syrup, which is high in protein and fat content, is then mixed back in with the wet distillers grain (WDG).

With the added syrup, the WDG still contains most of the nutritive value of the original feedstock plus the added yeast, so it makes an excellent cattle ration for local feedlots and dairies. After the addition of the syrup, it’s conveyed to a wet cake pad, where it is loaded for transport.

Many ethanol facilities do not have enough nearby cattle to utilize all of the WDG. It must be used soon after it’s produced because it spoils easily. So, it’s often sent through a drying system to remove moisture and extend its shelf life. This dried distillers grain (DDG) is commonly used as a high-protein ingredient in cattle, swine, poultry, and fish diets. It’s also being researched for human consumption.

BIOFUELS UPCOMING EVENTS

BIOFUELS UPCOMING EVENTS
MONTH DATE EVENT

LOCATION

APRIL

8-10

Biofuel Summit & Expo

St Petersburg, Russia

 

10

National Algae Association: Algae: the next fuel

Texas, US

 

22-24

Biofuel Summit & Expo Espana

Madrid, Spain

 

24-26

RENEXPO Central and South-East Europe 2008

Budapest, Hungary

 

27-29

2008 Asia International New Energy Technology & Equipment Exhibition

Beijing, China

 

28-30

Bioenergy 2008

Bangkok, Thailand

 

MAY

11-14

Alternative Fuels & Vehicles National Conference & Expo

Las Vegas, US

 

14-15

II Monographic conference on jatropha curcas

Madrid, Spain

 

19-21

Renewable Energy Finance and Investment Summit

Arizona, US

 

20-22

Biofuels markets Americas: 3rd annual congress

Miami, US

 

27-29

World Bioenergy 2008: Conference & Exhibition

Jonkoping, Sweden

 

JUNE

2-6

16th European Biomass Conference & Exhibition

Valencia, Spain

 

3-5

BioEnergy Conference and Exhibition 2008

British Columbia, Canada

 

4-5

Biofuels International Expo & Conference

Rotterdam, the Netherlands

 

9-11

Biofuels Markets Asia

New Delhi, India

 

10-11

World Biofuels Forum 2008

Prague, Czech Republic

 

10-11

Clean Fuels 2008

Warsaw, Poland

 

16-19

Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo

Tennessee, US

 

23-24

Biofuels 2010

Houston, Texas

 

JULY

9-11

BioFuels World 2008 Conference & Expo

Yokohama, Japan

 

AUGUST

21-22

Biofuels Summit India 2008

New Delhi, India

 

SEPTEMBER

15-17

Alternative Energy Sources & Technologies

Boston, Massachusetts, US

 

17-19

International summit on algae biofuels

New Delhi, India

 

23-24

Biomass World 2008

Beijing, China

 

27-30

World Congress on Oils & Fats

Australia

 

OCTOBER

1-4

4th International expo: biofuel industry & technology

Rome, Italy

 

15-16

StocExpo Asia

Singapore

 

15-16

European biofuels expo & conference 

Newark, UK

 

21-23

Biofuels Summit & Expo

Buenos Aires, Argentina

 

NOVEMBER

5-8

Biofuels Summit & Expo

Rimini, Italy

 

12-13

StocExpo Turkey 

Istanbul, Turkey

 

18-20

Oil & fats 2008

Muncih, Germany

 

DECEMBER

2-3

StocExpo South America

Sao Paulo, Brazil

 

2009

MARCH

16-18

World Biofuels Markets 

Brussels, Belgium

     
 

?Why Ethanol

Ethanol is good for your car. Gasoline enriched with ethanol outperforms straight gas is good for the environment. Gasoline enriched with 10% ethanol helps protect air quality by reducing harmful tailpipe emissions by 30%.

Ethanol is good for your community and country.  ethanol production creates tens of thousands of jobs, revitalizes rural communities, and reduces oil consumption thousands barrels per day … and growing.

Ethanol is ethyl alcohol (C2H6O), a renewable motor fuel made from corn, other high-starch crops, and cellulose.

Dubai Group invests in southeast Asia's largest biodiesel plant

 

GBD's plant has the ability to use both palm oil and jatropha as feedstock

Dubai Group, a financial services company of Dubai Holding, has invested $49.5 million (€31.2 million) for approximately 30% of Malaysia's GBD Investment (GBDI), the largest biodiesel plant in southeast Asia.

The investment was made by Dubai Ventures, the equity investment company of Dubai Investment Group, a subsidiary of Dubai Group.

GBDI has completed construction and begun production of its 200,000 tonne biodiesel facility at Lahad Datu in the state of Sabah, Malaysia. The company is preparing to begin construction on its phase II facility, which will increase GBDI's biodiesel production capacity to 500,000 tonnes a year. GBD's plant has the ability to use both palm oil and jatropha as feedstock.

GBDI's facility will produce biodiesel and pharma-grade glycerine under the European (EN) and US (ASTM) standards for the Korean as well as global markets. GBD has already signed off-take agreements for all of its production.

'Biofuels and renewable energy are the preferred industry focus for Dubai Investment Group, and we intend to bring this technology to the geographic regions, especially the Middle East, where we currently have a presence,' Abdulhakeem Kamkar, CEO of Dubai Investment Group, says.

GBDI intends to use the proceeds from the recent placement for working capital in the Lahad Datu biodiesel plant and its investment into jatropha plantations in the Philippines. The plantation, which will cover up to 200,000 hectares, will have a potential annual production of 750,000 tonnes of crude jatropha oil.

Enzymes used in Biogas Plants can increase the Profitpotential

PRLog (Press Release)  – Enzymes used in Biogas Plants can increase the Profitpotential more than 35 percent

Biogas Plants is fast growing Market worldwide. High tech plants can be very profitable
through converging Nano- and Biotechnology for the gas cleaning process and use Enzymes which are the focal point of the biotechnological process to make profit.

Biogas power plants are a combination of anaerobic digestion systems with associated electricity generators such as gas turbines or gas engines. The electricity they produce is classified as renewable or green energy and if sold into the national grid attract subsidies.
In the last 20 years, biogas utilization been successful in wastewater treatment plants, industrial processing applications, landfill and the agricultural sector. The future increase use of biogas is a strong goal in most countries, not only because is it a renewable energy source but it will help to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, water pollution and soil degradation and last not least it will change agriculture sectors in many countries worldwide to produce partly energy.

The production of electricity is the main mode of biogas utilization in the future but the key factor for profit is the process optimization, gas cleaning and biotechnology.
There are 12 000 Plants higher than 100 KW worldwide in 2006 but 40 percent are not
profitable today, mainly because operation knowledge is poor. Up to 2030 there will be build more than 250 000 plants and the market will reach 43 billion US Dollar in 2030,
after a recent released study by helmut kaiser consultancy, http://www.hkc22.com/biogas.html
There is a substancial potenzial to increase yield and productivity of biogas production
with the optimization of the substrates and the use of enzymes which increase the
cost - benefit ratio from averige today 1 to 4 up to 1:8 and make a plant highly profitable. Offering the whole value chain is a vital factor for the companies to be competitive in the future.
Biogas is part of renewable energies (http://www.hkc22.com/renewableenergy.html ) worldwide.
The total energy mix of the future will be more regenerative and sustainable. The generation and storage of renewable energy will be the fastest growing sector in energy market for next 20 years. The market volume of renewable energy worldwide will increase from US$ 95.8 billion in 2007 to US$ 124.4 billion in 2010 and reach US$ 198.1 billion in 2015. These figures and developments are based on the whole value chain.