OA21044A - Methods for production of bio-crude oil. - Google Patents

Methods for production of bio-crude oil. Download PDF

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OA21044A
OA21044A OA1202200404 OA21044A OA 21044 A OA21044 A OA 21044A OA 1202200404 OA1202200404 OA 1202200404 OA 21044 A OA21044 A OA 21044A
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oil
biomass
alcohol
éthanol
product oil
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OA1202200404
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Nielsen Joachim Bachmann
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Kvasir Technologies Aps
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Abstract

Where thermochemical liquefaction of lignocellulosic biomass is conducted using recirculated product oil as solvent, yields can be substantially increased by addition of a short chain alcohol reactant such as ethanol or methanol. A synergistic effect is thereby obtained where liquefaction is improved over using either recycled product oil or alcohol alone. The combination of recirculated product oil and alcohol reactant permits high onversion at operating pressures considerably lower than typically applied in alcohol solvolysis, typically within the range 30-60 bar. The liquefaction reaction occurs at subcritical pressure where the alcohol acts as a gaseous reactant and not as a solvent.

Description

METHODS FOR PRODUCTION OF BIO-CRUDE OIL
Field: The invention relates in general to thermochemical processing of lignocellulosic biomass and in particular to methods for production of bio-crude oil involving re-circulation of product oil.
Thermochemical liquéfaction of biomass is wîdély known în the art, both for producing bio-crude oil and also as a means of fractionation permittîng separate recovery of valuable components. (For review see Huang 2015, Belkheiri 2018, Castello 2018, Pang 2019) Many different types of biomass hâve been treated by thermochemical liquéfaction using many different sub-critîcal or super-critical solvents including primarily aqueous solvents, or non-aqueous, or a mixture of aqueous and non-aqueous co-solvents.
It is generally accepted that thermochemical liquéfaction can be advantageously practiced using a slurry having the highest practicable biomass concentration that is “pumpable.” Re-circulation of 15 both product oil and aqueous phase in aqueous thermochemical liquéfaction imparts well known advantages, including increasing “pumpability” ofthe biomass input feed. (See Jensen 2017).
In cases where the biomass feedstock has low water content, a separate aqueous phase can be avoided altogether. Where the aim is production of bio-crude oil from lignocellulosic biomass 20 feedstocks, rather than more elaborate fractionation, direct liquéfaction can be advantageously achieved using a non-aqueous solvent consisting simply of re-circulated product oil.
Thermochemical liquéfaction processes that rely on re-circulation of bio-crude product oil as the process solvent must typically introduce some “make-up solvent” to replace the stream of product 25 oil that is removed at steady-state. In cases where the biomass feedstock has signifrcant water content, the “make-up solvent” can simply be re-circulated aqueous product phase. In cases where the biomass feedstock îs comparatively dry, the “make-up” solvent used in prior art processes has typically been an aromatic oil such as light cycle oil or other petroleum refinery side stream. Such aromatic oils were convenient in that they acted as hydrogen donor solvents and were, thereby, 30 themselves altered in the process, ultimately imparting a quality of reduced viscosity to the product oil so as to render it more readily pumpable (i.e., easier to transport for further processing at a petroleum refinery). See WO2012/005784.
We hâve discovered that, surprisingly, în a thermochemical liquéfaction process that relies on re35 circulated product oil as the process solvent, bio-crude oil yield can be împroved where a short21044 chain aliphatic alcohol reactant, which is typically consumed during the process, is included in the make-up solvent.
Brief description of the figures.
Figure l Effect of varions réaction conditions on reaction pressure at 350°C.
Figure 2 Effect of amount of éthanol added on product yields.
Figure 3 Effect of éthanol density on liquéfaction performance.
Figure 4 Effect of amount of éthanol added on product yields.
Figure 5 Effect of amount of éthanol added on the elemental composition of oil.
Figure 6 Effect of different model compounds added as “recycle oil” in the presence of éthanol.
Figure 7 Effect of varions combinations with Anisole.
Figure 8 Effect of various combinations with Tar.
Figure 9 Effect of various combinations of real recycled oil with and without éthanol.
Figure 10 Effect of amount of biomass added on product yields.
Figure 11 Effect of degree of lignin loading on product yields.
Figure 12 Effect of résidence time on product yields when using 1g pine wood.
Figure 13 Effect of résidence time on product yields when using 3g pine wood.
Figure 14 Effect of reaction time, 2h (A) vs. Ih (B), for two experiments with recycled oil, éthanol and biomass.
Figure 15 Effect different feedstocks (pine wood and wheat straw) on product yields.
Figure 16 Effect of different feedstocks (pine wood and lignin) on product yields.
Figure 17 Effect of feedstock biomass (lignin vs. pine vs. birch) on elemental composition of oil.
Figure 18 Effect of feedstock biomass (lignin vs. pine vs. birch) on product yields.
Figure 19 Effect of lignin-oil HDO on upgraded product oil composition.
Figure 20 Effect of HDO on Decane solvent composition.
Figure 21 Effect of wood-oîl HDO at different reaction températures on upgraded product oii composition.
Figure 22 Comparison of product oil composition after HDO of lignin-oil and wood-oil at sîmilar 15 conditions.
Figure 23 One embodiment of a system suitabie for practîcîng methods of the invention.
Detailed description of embodiments.
Addition of even comparatively small quantifies of short chain alcohol to a biomass siurry formed from fresh feedstock and re-circulated product oil results in reduced char formation and improved bio-crude yield from thermal liquéfaction.
In the prior art process known as “éthanol solvolysis,” thermal liquéfaction of biomass has been conducted in the presence of éthanol. The term “supercritical éthanol” has frequently been applied in reference to this process because of the high températures at which it is conducted, We previously presented evidence in WO2016/113280 that, in the context of biomass liquéfaction, éthanol exists as a distinct phase in nominally supercritical conditions. Here we can report more 30 clearly that under typical reaction conditions in éthanol liquéfaction, éthanol is clearly subcritical and is not a “solvent” at ali but rather a gaseous reactant.
In ethanol-liquefaction, the alcohol is consumed by three distinct primary pathways, as described in (J. B. Nielsen, A. Jensen, C. B. Schandel, C. Felby and A. D, Jensen, Solvent consumption in 35 non-catalytic alcohol solvolysis of biorefinery lignin, Sustainable Energy Fuels, 2017, 1, 200621044
2015), (1) direct thennal décomposition to gases, (2) réaction to form higher alcohols, ethers and esters, and (3) direct reaction with biomass fragments yieldîng oil species where the alcohol, or part of the alcohol molécule, is directly covalently attached to the product bio-oil molécules.
Reaction (1) is disadvantageous, but can be limited by reducing résidence time and reaction 5 severity. Reaction (2) yields products of Guerbet and Cannizzaro/Tishchenko reaction. This is generally undesîrable. However, products of this pathway are believed to ultimately assist in reducing char and improving oil yield since alcohols are also a product of these reactions. Reaction (3) is very désirable and the direct incorporation of alcohol by covalent bonding to bio-oil fragments/molecules is believed to be the reason for inhibition of char formation and improved oil 10 yield, stability and lack of acidity. Alcohol can be incorporated in the form of C-C bonding, in the form of alcohol reactant derived ethers or esters.
The emerging “green” biofuels market is subject to considérable price volatility. Ironically, it is often the case that direct incorporation of éthanol mass into bio-crude oil can be, itself, a revenue 15 positive process. But even where éthanol consumption imposes some process cost, addition of éthanol to the feedstock feedstream in thermal liquéfaction provides net benefits by improving overall bio-crude oil yields.
Methods of the invention provide processes for liquéfaction of bîomass which comprise 20 thermochemical treatment of a slurry formed from biomass feedstock and re-circulated product bio-oil, or a fraction thereof, to which is added an alcohol reactant that promûtes liquéfaction. The liquéfaction reaction occurs in a reactive atmosphère of alcohol that is neîther in a liquid State nor a supercritical State but in a subcritîcal State as defined by having a température above the critical température but a pressure below the critical pressure. At reaction conditions the alcohol reacts as 25 alcohol vapors and not as a solvent. The alcohol can be dissolved in the mixture comprisîng of recycled product bio-oil and biomass.
In some embodiments, the invention provides a method for production of bio-crude oil comprisîng the steps of:
(i). Providing lignocellulosic biomass, and (ii) . Subjecting said biomass to thermochemical treatment at température between 250 and 450°C for résidence time between 1 and 120 minutes as a slurry formed with re-circulated product oil obtained from previous thermochemical treatment of sîmîlar biomass to which is added a shortchain alcohol reactant in an amount correspondîng to between 2% and 150% of the slurry dry' 35 weight, wherein the ratio of biomass to re-circulated product oil is within the range 1:1 and 1:5 w/w and the ratio of biomass to added alcohol is within the range 1:9 and 5:1 w/w.
In some embodiments, the invention provides a method of optimizing a continuons thermal liquéfaction process comprising the step of:
(î). Providing a slurry formed with biomass and product oil obtained from previous thermochemical treatment of similar biomass as feedstream to a continuous thermal liquéfaction system, and (ii) . Determinîng an appropriate ratio of slurry to alcohol reactant added to the thermal liquéfaction process that is sufficient to maîntain an alcohol density of at least 17 kg/m3 within the thermal reactor of the thermal liquéfaction system at steady State.
As used herein, the following terms hâve the following meanîng:
“Bio-crude oil” refers to product oil obtained by a thermal liquéfaction process.
“Bio-oil” is a broad term, which includes bio-crude oils, as well as pyrolysis oils.
“Effective amount of added catalyst” refers to a quantity of catalyst aione or in combination with one or more other catalysts sufficient to increase conversion yield or decrease O:C ratio of product oil by at least 15% in relative terms compared with the reaction conducted under équivalent conditions în the absence of added catalyst.
“Ethanol density within the thermal reactor of the thermal liquéfaction system at steady State” refers to (the average value over one résidence time in a continuous system at steady State of mass of éthanol within the thermal reactor portion of system) divided by (the volume of the thermal reactor portion of the system).
“Hydroprocessing” refers to reactions in the presence of a catalyst and hydrogen at elevated température and pressure, used for modification of organic materials (e.g. biomass, petroleum products. coal and the like). Typically, hydroprocessing provides a more volatile product, often a liquid. It can include hydrogénation, isomerization, deoxygenation, hydrodeoxygenation and the like. Hydroprocessing can include hydrocracking and hydro treatîng. It typically removes components that lower the quality, usability, or energy content of the product, such as metals, oxygen, sulfur and/or nitrogen.
“Liquéfaction” refers to conversion of at least a portion of a substantially solid biomass material to produce a liquid fraction or into components that are liquid or are soluble în liquid carriers used in the process. The product of liquéfaction is a liquid or suspension or slurry, which may be separated from any residual solids or solid by-products.
“Product oil” refers to a water insoluble mixture of réaction products of thermochemical liquéfaction of biomass that, if heated to 100° C, is liquid.
“Product oil obtained from previous thermochemical treatment of similar biomass” refers to whole product oil or any fraction of product oil with or without further processing after recovery from thermochemical treatment at température between 250 and 450°C for résidence time between 1 and 120 minutes of lîgnocellulosic biomass conducted either with or without added product oil or added alcohol reactant. The terra “re-circulated product oil” can be used interchangeably and has the same meaning.
“Pyrolysîs” refers to thermal depolyraerization of biomass at températures above 500 °C in an inert atmosphère.
“Refinery” and “refinery stream” refer to a petroleum processing facility and to a liquid stream processed in a petroleum-processing system. The product produced by the liquéfaction reaction described herein can be added to a refinery stream, because it is compatible with petroleum refinery streams and processing methods.
“Résidence time” refers to the amount of time at which a slurry of biomass, product oil and alcohol reactant is at température between 250 and 450° C.
“Short chain alcohol reactant” refers to raethanol, éthanol, 1-propanol, 1-butanol, a straight chain primary alcohol or functionalized alcohol with a boiling point lower than 150°C or a mixture thereof. A mixture may comprise any combination of any of these alcohols in any proportions.
“Thermal liquéfaction process” refers to a thermochemical treatment wherein at least a portion of a substantially solid biomass material is converted to a liquid fraction or into components that are liquid or soluble in liquid carriers. The product of liquéfaction is a liquid or suspension or slurry, which may be separated from any residual solids or solid by-products.
Any convenîent lignocellulosîc biomass may be used to practice methods of the invention, including rot wood, switchgrass pellets, reject wood chips, grasses, straws, sawdust, and other feedstocks. The biomass for this process need not be dried for use; typically, the biomass has a moisture content of about 10% to about 70 wt. %. In some embodiments the moisture content in the biomass is reduced to less than 10% by premixing re-circulated product oil with biomass and recoverîng water by phase séparation resulting from lack ot water miscibility ofthe product oil. In some embodiments the biomass is dried to yield a moisture level no higher than 5% before using it as feedstock for the reaction. Wood or wood byproducts can be used, as well as sources such as switchgrass, hay, corn stover, cane, and the like. In some embodiments, the biomass is one or more component derived from whole feedstocks, such as isolated lignin process residual. Wood chips or similar raw wood residues are suitable for use, either alone or in combination with other biomass materials. Such woody materials tend to be high in lignin content. Similarly, grassy materials such as switchgrass, lawn clîppings or hay can be used, either alone or in combination with other biomass materials. Grassy materials tend to contain large amounts of cellulose and lower lignin ratios. Partially processed materials, such as solid residues from wood pulp production can also be used. In some embodiments, a mixture of different types of biomass is used; ideally, the biomass will comprise signîficant amounts (e.g., at least about 10% by weight) of both lignin and cellulose. In some embodiments dried, or partially dried, biogas digestate can be used as biomass feedstock for the novel liquéfaction process. Mixtures containîng both lignîns and cellulose hâve been found to be most effîciently liquefied by the methods described herein. Thus it may be useful when processing lignin-rich materials, or cellulose-depleted ones like fermentation by-products, to add celluiose-rîch materials such as grasses to provide an optimal balance of components în the biomass. In some embodiments, high lignin content feedstocks are bénéficiai în tenus of obtaînîng reduced oxygen content bio-oil with high degree of aromaticity. Whereas in other applications, high cellulose and hemicellulose content feedstocks are desired in tenus of obtaînîng higher liquéfaction yields. Use of residual lignin alone as feedstock typically results in a product oil with lower oxygen content which is désirable from a fuel perspective.
Biomass for use în the methods described herein can be prepared by conventional methods known in the art, such as chipping, grinding, shredding, chopping, and the like. As a general matter, comminutîon of biomass by mechanical methods to provide smaller particles and/or increased surface area can reduce the processing times, températures and pressures required to produce a liquefied product. However, a finely divided biomass is not essential to the operabîlity of the présent methods, in contrast with prior art methods for fast pyrolysis which generally require biomass to be relatively dry and small in size, which significantly increases the cost of the process.
The biomass is generally made up of discrète pièces. In typical embodiments, the biomass is divided into pièces under about one inch in thickness in smallest dimension, and under about 25 square inches of surface area on their largest surface. In some embodiments, at least 75% of the discrète pièces hâve a greatest dimension of at least about one inch. In another embodiment, the discrète pièces hâve a greatest dimension of about 3 inches. The pièces can be of regular shapes, but typically they are irregular in shape. In some embodiments, the average piece has a thickness up to about one centimeter and a largest surface of about 25 square centimeters. In some embodiments, the biomass is divided into pièces small enough so that most of the mass (e.g., at least about 75% ofthe biomass) can fit through 1-cm diameter sieve holes. Material can optionally be finely divided, where the majority of the material can pass through 7 mm holes or through 5 mm holes when sized or sieved.
Methods of the invention can be conducted in batches or as a continuons flow operation. Parameters of time, température and pressure are generally similar for continuous flow or batch processing. In continuous flow mode, the température and time parameters correspond to times where the mixture of biomass and the solvent combination are at elevated températures, e.g., above about 300°C. In embodiments practiced as a continuous process, some portion of product oil is removed as finished product while most of the product oil process stream is recycled back to continued thermochemical treatment.
in some embodiments, the portion recycled is within the range 50 to 95 wt.% and the portion removed as final product oil is within the range 5 to 50 wt.%. Recycled product oil itself provides adéquate solvent to achieve biomass liquéfaction. In some embodiments, a make-up solvent can advantageously be added to the process to replace some of the product oil removed from the process stream. In some embodiments, a make-up solvent with high aromatic content is used such as light cycle oil or other sidestream products from petroleum refineries. In some embodiments, éthanol or methanol itself is used as the makeup solvent. In some embodiments, éthanol or methanol is added to the make-up solvent or otherwise introduced to the thermal liquéfaction System (thermochemical treatment).
Methods of the invention are typically performed at pressures above 1 atmosphère, where both alcohol reactant vapors, volatile products and product gases give rise to pressure. The thermochemical treatment is thus advantageously performed in a pressurized batch container or continuous System at an operating pressure between about 10 bar and about 100 bar when the reaction mixture is heated to reaction température. In a preferred embodiment, the mixture in the pressurized container or continuons system is heated to a température between about 300°C and 400°C or between about 250°C and 450°C while the pressure is between about 10 bar and about 70 bar, preferably about 30-60 bar, such as 45-55 bar. Advantageously, the combination of recirculated product oil and alcohol reactant permits high conversion at operating pressures below about 100 bar, such that the theremochemical treatment can typically be conducted at a pressure within the range 30-60 bar, or 45-60 bar. These pressures are distinctly lower than those required with “éthanol solvolysis.” Methods of the invention accordingly provide réduction in cost of capital equipment and safety measures relative to these prior art methods.
The reaction température (together with pressure and reaction time) is commonly said to express the “severity” of reaction conditions. The température needs to be above a certain level to achieve liquéfaction, and not merely dissolve the lignocellulose, or components thereof, e.g. lignin, into alcohol. Organosolv extraction processes, and processes such as those described în WO20197053287 and WO2019/158752 do not go above 250°C. These processes are merely “extracting” lignin/Iîgnocellulose with minor modification of the dissolved biomass. As a complex, cross-linked polymer, lignin has an initial glass transition température and a range of températures above this over which it gradually becomes fluid. This température range is typically around 140°C to 200°C. To stimulate fragmentation and depolymerization, the température needs to be considerably higher than this. When the température îs increased, the rate of depolymerization will also increase and récalcitrant Chemical linkages will break. As the température is increased further, to a température above 400°C, the rate at which the alcohol reactant thermally décomposés increases at a faster rate. Thus, suitable reaction températures for practicing methods of the invention are typically within the range 300 to 400°C. However, in some embodiments, it can be advantageous to include conditioning of the bîomass/product oil slurry within the température range 250 to 300° C. And in some embodiments, notwithstanding the tendency to promote alcohol décomposition, températures within the range 400 to 450°C can be advantageously used, particularly where résidence times are kept short. Thus thermochemical treatment can be practiced in methods of the invention within the range 250 to 450°C. During liquéfaction in alcohols, gasses are a direct product of reaction and most predominately seen as a product of reaction at températures of 300°C and higher. At this température the liquéfaction of biomass îs accelerated. Optimum biomass liquéfaction température is typically around 350°C. One skilled in the art will readily arrive at an appropriate température and reaction time through routine expérimentation by continuously increasing the température in a sériés of experiments and determining the degree of alcohol loss due to thermal dégradation and char formation. In case alcohol consumption is judged to be too high in light of overall process économies, reaction time can be reduced.
In general, comparatively short reaction times (résidence tîntes within the thermochemical treatment) are advantageous, within the range 1 to 15 minutes, or 5 to 15 minutes, or between 1 and 120 minutes. Longer résidence times lead to décomposition of product oil with associated production of unwanted secondary gaseous products and char. It is accordingly désirable to reduce résidence time to less than 2 hours, and preferably less than 1 hour, to reduce formation of char and gas which reduce oil yield. A reaction time of no more than I hour is preferred over a reaction time of 2 hours with respect to limiting the degree of recycled product oil décomposition and charring. One skilled in the art will readily détermine an approprîate résidence time in the thermochemical treatment without undue expérimentation, depending on reaction conditions and limitations of process économies. In terms of product oil yield, a very short reaction, such as one less than 1 minute, may not be enough to produce substantîal amount of oil. So the optimum résidence time is typically longer than one minute, but no so long as to favor décomposition (charring and gas) reactions such as occur in résidence times over one hour. In tenus of product oil quality, as measured by degree of deoxygenation, stability and acidity, this tends to be improved with increased résidence time, up to some point.
However, réduction of résidence time reduces both operating expenses (OPEX) and capital expenses (CAPEX) for a production facility. Accordingly, it can be advantageous to apply shorter résidence times, notwithstanding somewhat lower yield and product oil quality, depending on overall considérations of process économies. Where the System applied for heatîng tire biomass slurry to reaction température works only gradually, résidence time can be shorter, where some degree of liquéfaction has already been achieved during heat-up. Altematively, where heat-up time is very rapid, a slightly longer résidence time may be approprîate. Optimum résidence time can be determined in a continuons setup much more accurately than in a batch setting since the latter imposes a substantîal thermal lag while a continuons setup can operate with much greater heatîng and cooling rates. Accordingly, with a continuous System, a much more accurate détermination can be made of the effects of even very short reaction times of around 1 minute.
The total amount of re-circulated product oil used in the slurry can vary depending on reaction conditions. A first aîm is to use enough product oil so as to make the biomass slurry pumpable, whereby it can be readily pumped into a pressurized reactor within which the thermochemical treatment is conducted. The amount of product oil requîred to achieve pumpability can vary depending on the biomass feedstock used and its manner of pre-processing, on the composition of the product oil, on the composition and quanty of any make-up solvent used, and on the quantity and manner in which alcohol reactant is added to the reaction. In some embodiments, only a middle range distillation fraction of product oil is used in recirculation, which will generaily permit higher biomass ratios in a pumpable slurry' compared with use of whole product oil. In some embodiments, alcohol reactant is added under pressure within a pressurized reactor, however, in other embodiments, alcohol reactant can be added to the biomass/product oil slurry before it is pumped into the pressurized reactor which will further permit high biomass ratios in the slurry. One skilled in the art will readily détermine an appropriate ratio of biomass to re-circulated product oil without undue expérimentation based on reaction conditions. Typically, the total amount of the recycle bio-oil product used in the slurry will be at least about 50 wt. %, and typically is at least about 100 wt. %, of the mass of the biomass to be treated. In some embodiments, where only a middle range distillation fraction of whole product oil is used for recirculation, a higher ratio of biomass to oil may still provide apumpable slurry. In some embodiments, a product oil to biomass ratio of at least 2, or at least 3, or at least 4, or at least 5 can be used. Expressed altematively, the ratio of biomass to re-circulated product oil w/w in some embodiments is at most 1:2, or 1:3, or 1:4, or 1:5, with optimal range 1:1 to 1:5. In some embodiments the biomass and recycled product oil is premixed and preheated to up to 200°C to facilitate a more homogeneous mixture which further promûtes pumpabilîty.
In some embodiments re-circulated product oil comprises a fraction of whole product oil as distinguished by boiling range. Preferably a fraction having a boiling point below 35O°C is used. but a fraction having boîng point between 100°C and 300°C may be used, or a between 200°C and 4Û0°Cf or between 300°C and 600°C. The fraction of recycled oil can be generaily described accordîng to its boiling range as the lower fraction, or upper fraction, or middle fraction. In some embodiments the recycled oil products is not cooled or is only partially cooled prior to recirculation. This will reduce the cost for heating and thus OPEX.
Re-circulated product oil idéal ly contains oxygen and has high aromaticîty for maximum positive impact on biomass liquéfaction. Recirculating product oil on its own provides adéquate solvent to achîeve biomass liquéfaction. However, the degree of biomass liquéfaction and the net oil yield is improved when an alcohol, e.g. éthanol, is added to the recycled oil. It îs désirable to add both éthanol and recycle oil to the reaction due to a synergistic effect in which liquéfaction is improved over using either recycled product oil or éthanol alone. Re-circulated product oil, or biomass tars, may décomposé when subjected to thermal processing; however, addition of an alcohol reactant suppresses charring and improves the liquéfaction yield. This effect is likely explained by the inhibitory and suppressing effects of primary alcohols with regards to poiymerîzation. The synergistic effect of using both recycled oil and an alcohol reactant in biomass liquéfaction is observed independent on the ratio of biomass to re-circulated oil.
Changing the biomass to vessel loadîng has limited to no effect on product yîelds but the ratio of biomass to alcohol reactant (e.g. éthanol) is of importance. The effect is most notable for ratios of biomass to éthanol of 1:1 w/w or greater (when the amount of biomass exceeds the amount of alcohol reactant). The ratio of biomass feedstock to alcohol reactant inside the reactor at reaction conditions is more important for the reaction chemistry than the ratio of feedstock to alcohol reactant ied into the reactor. By increasing the amount of alcohol reactant relative to biomass feedstock fed into the reactor în a continuons setting while keeping this relative ratio lower inside the reactor effectively ensures a higher degree of replenishment of spent and reacted alcohol reactant. When the ratio of alcohol to biomass inside the reactor is changed it directly affects the reaction kinetics as one skilled in the art will readily appreciate. In batch mode operation the concentration of reactants, both biomass/lignin and éthanol, drops over time and it is expected that continuons operation will thus improve oil yield and reduce char yield since reactant concentrations are effectively kept at a constant maximum due to constant replenishment. One skilled in the art can readily déterminé the rate of replenishment needed for each of biomass feedstock and alcohol reactant based on routine optimization of results from a continuons setup and thus be abie to détermine the optimum ratio of biomass to alcohol to be fed into the system.
In some embodiments the recycled product oil and biomass is premixed and pumped prior to mixing with alcohol reactant. This is particularly advantageous in the case of recycling oil at 200°C which otherwise would cause low boiling alcohol reactant to evaporate and exert a vapor pressure greater than I atm necessitating that the pre-mixing vessel is pressurîzed which it otherwise need not be. Biomass îs generally stable at températures up to 100°C and sometimes up to 200°C after which décomposition will occur if heated higher without the presence of e.g. an alcohol reactant.
The total amount of alcohol reactant to be added to the slurry of biomass and product oil can vary depending on reaction conditions. One considération is simply process économies: In some cases, incorporation of alcohol reactant into product oil is revenue positive, favoring use of larger amounts of alcohol. The alcohol reactant is consumed in the liquéfaction reaction but in order to ensure appropriate reaction kinetics, unspent alcohol typically remains at the end of the process. In some embodiments, more than 50% of the alcohol reactant initial ly added is recovered as unspent alcohol reactant. In some embodiments unspent alcohol reactant is recovered by distillation and recycled to be used în the liquéfaction. The amount of alcohol reactant added can be about the same (by weight) as the amount of biomass for a given batch process, or it can be lower or higher. Moreover, much lower amounts of alcohol reactant can be used in the présent methods, and in some embodiments the amount of the alcohol is about half or less than half of the amount of biomass used (by weight). In some embodiments, the amount of alcohol is up to about half of the weight of the biomass to be treated, e.g., about 0 wt. % to about 50%, or up to about 25%. Or expressed alternat] vely the ratio of biomass to added alcohol w/w is advantageously within the range 0.1:1 to 2:1, or up to 4; 1, or between about 20:1 and 4:1, or between 10:1 and 4:1, where then optimal range is typically from 1:9 to 5:1. In some embodiments, it is about 5% to about 25% of the weight of biomass to be treated, or between 10% and 25%. A dry weight (total weight less water content) may be used in this ratio for consistency, even though moist biomass may be used in the process. The ability to operate with low volumes of alcohol reactant is an important advantage of the présent methods compared with “éthanol solvolysis. Expressed as weight percentage of the biomass/product oil siurry, alcohol content is typically added in an amount corresponding to between 2% and 150% of the initial siurry dry weight before alcohol addition. The optimal range is between 6% to 45% of the siurry dry weight.
Since added alcohol reactant is consumed in the liquéfaction process, it is necessary to add enough alcohol to the biomass/product oil siurry to replenish lost alcohol and thereby maintain an optimum alcohol density within the reactor at steady State in embodiments that apply a continuons process. In some embodiments, in the case where the alcohol reactant is éthanol, an appropriate added alcohol density within a thermal reactor at steady State is 17 kg/m3 or 5, or 9, or between 2 and 52. Tn some embodiments, a thermal liquéfaction process is optîmized by selecting an appropriate ratio of biomass to éthanol for any given set of process conditions that is sufficient to maintain an éthanol density within the thermal reactor portion of the system at steady State of 17 kg/m3 or 5, or 9, or between 2 and 52. One skilled in the art can readily détermine an appropriate ratio with routine optimisation. Typically the ratio of biomass to added éthanol is within the range of 1:9 and 5:1 w/w but can be within the range of 5:1 to 15:1 in some embodiments. In the case of alcohol reactants other than éthanol, the appropriate density îs approximately the same as with éthanol, although the effective “molarity” may be higher, for example, as in the case where the alcohol reactant is methanol.
Idéal ly an alcohol reactant such as éthanol is replenished as it îs consumed in the process. This can be readily achieved when conducting the process continuously rather than in batch mode. The reaction chemistry is dépendent on the alcohol concentration inside the reactor. Alcohol reactant density of 0.017 g/ml is typically sufficient but with routine expérimentation one skilled in the art will optimize the process, typically by increasing the alcohol reactant density up to at least 0.05 g/ml after which increasing the density further may only hâve a reduced effect on liquéfaction 5 performance. One skilled in the art will readily appreciate the need to ensure that reactant éthanol density is sufficient for adéquate liquéfaction performance. An alcohol density of around 0.05 g/ml is préférable but positive effects by either lowering or increasing density from this point may be manifested depending on tolérance for éthanol loss and increased reaction pressure which can increase OPEX and CAPEX respectively în a commercial setting.
A shift in reaction kinetics will typically be observed when increasing the reactant alcohol density after a certain point. This shift can occur for éthanol between a density of 0 to 0.1 g/ml. This shift will indicate that the concentration of éthanol is approaching or has reached a point of saturation after which increasing density further has only limited positive effect. It may nevertheless be 15 désirable to increase the density beyond this point if the process économies support alcohol consumption. When increasing éthanol density both gas and oil yield increases; however, after a certain density the positive effect of increasing density further shows only minor additional enhancement.
The optimum alcohol density is a function of reaction time. In a continuons setting an alcohol reactant will be continue usly replenished to varying degrees depending on the résidence time in the reactor in order to always ensure a minimum alcohol density.
The partial pressure exerted by the reactant alcohol does not need to be supercritical at reaction 25 conditions. It is advantageous to operate at subcritical conditions from a cost of operation perspective. Effective liquéfaction can be obtained at partial pressure of the alcohol reactant substantially lower than the supercritical pressure. In the case of using éthanol as a reactant, which has a supercritical pressure of 61 bar, a partial pressure of éthanol of 32 bar is sufficient for obtaining effective conversion of biomass feedstock. In some embodiments, the thermochemical 30 treatment îs conducted under circumstances where total pressure, including alcohol partial pressure, is less than 60 bar, or less than 55 bar, or less then 50 bar, or less than 45 bar. In some embodiments, partial pressure of added alcohol reactant is subcritical and < 60 bar, or < 50 bar, or < 45 bar, or < 35 bar.
The partial pressure of the alcohol reactant is determined differently depending on whether the process is carried out in a batch or continuous mode. In a batch reactor, a sealed vessel of fîxed volume V, the predetermined amount of added alcohol of weight m will at any reaction température above the supercritical température (e.g. éthanol has supercrîtical température of 24IC) yield a reactive single phase atmosphère with a fixed density rho = m/V. This single phase atmosphère exerts different pressures dépendent on the température. Only empîrical models exist that can predict this pressure, the partial pressure of the alcohol. One example is presented in Bazaev, A. et al., “PVT measurements for pure ethanoi in the near-critical and supercritical régions,” International Journal of Thermophysics (2007) 28(1):194. This shows empîrical data of pressure exerted (alcohol partial pressure) for various isotherms (reaction températures above the supercritical température) in the case of éthanol at different densities (rho).
In a continuous setting the pressure of the reaction vessel is fixed by presetting a backpressure regulator that will ensure that the pressure inside the reactor vessel never exceeds this pressure independent on how much flows in and out of the system. The amount of alcohol added to the reactor vessel will only dictate the partial pressure of alcohol if the pressure setting of the back pressure regulator (the total system pressure) is high enough, but generally, the backpressure regulator setting will dictate the maximum alcohol partial pressure achievable inside the system. The partial pressure of alcohol is thus determined as equals to or less than the total reaction pressure inside the reaction vessel. Gaseous species and other volatiles (gas phase at reaction température) are formed durîng reaction effectively exerting a partial pressure and together with alcohol reactant the sum of the partial pressure of the volatiles and the alcohol equals to the total system pressure (as determined by the backpressure regulator setting). The partial pressure of alcohol can be increased by increasing the relative rate at which alcohol is added to the reaction vessel to counter the effects of either alcohol decomposition/loss over time or the effects of lowered alcohol partial pressure due to the presence of other volatiles in the system. Since alcohol is consumed over time, a shortenîng of the reaction time will also resuit in an increased alcohol partial pressure. The total system pressure (as determined by the backpressure regulator) is the most important setting for regulating the alcohol partial pressure, since a partial pressure of alcohol can never exceed this pressure.
The partial pressure of alcohol in a continuous setting is determined as to achieve sufficient alcohol density which is needed for reaction. A fixed target density at a predetermined réaction température, e.g. 35O°C, can thus be used to identiiy and détermine the desired partial pressure through empîrical data as described in the method for determinîng batch reactor partial pressures above. In a continuous settîng the back pressure will thus need to be adjusted to relieve pressure at this pressure or at a higher pressure to achieve the desired partial pressure of alcohol during reaction conditions.
In some embodiments, liquéfaction is conducted in the absence of an effective amount of added catalyst: the product oil/alcohol reactant combination and operating température and pressure provide efficient liquéfaction, converting at least about 40% ofthe biomass solids (on a dry weight basis) into liquid products and at least 60% into liquid and/or gaseous products and at least 90% into liquid and/or gaseous and/or solid products. As a resuit ofthe solvent and condition sélections described herein, high efficiency can be obtained without adding a catalyst, and use of conventional catalysts to promote the liquéfaction process resuit in only slightly împroved efficiency.
In some embodiments the solid residual product of liquéfaction can be used as a soil amendment. In doing so, the solid residual can be called biochar and yields an effective means of sequestering carbon. In some embodiments the solid residual product can be bumed for process beat.
The produced product bio-oil is shelf stable with no sédimentation or water formation during shelf storage for 12 months.
In some embodiments, methods of the invention further comprise recovering product oil and subjecting it to further processing. In some embodiments, product oil may be recovered in a manner that does not separate unspent alcohol reactant, i.e., unspent alcohol reactant may be included within the product oil. Unspent alcohol content of product oil can be 0.1 and 15 wt. % în total. This is particularly relevant where methanol îs used as alcohol reactant. In some embodiments, ail unspent alcohol is included within product oil. The recovered product oil can be subjected to Hydrodeoxygenation with hydrogen over a heterogeneous catalyst with no charrîng, or a degree of charrîng of less than 10 wt% relative to the oil. Exhaustive deoxygenation can be obtained, i.e. complété deoxygenation to yield a product with 0% oxygen, by hydrodeoxygenation over a catalyst even at températures as low as 30Û°C. Both oil product from isolated lignin residual and from whole lignocellulose can be treated by hydrodeoxygenation with similar results.
Lîgnin-oil hydrodeoxygenation yields predomînantly functionalized cyclohexanes whereas hydrodeoxygenation of oil from lignocellulose yields both functionalized cyclohexane species as well as cyclopentane species due to the content of carbohydrates and C5 sugars in lignocellulose whereas the lignin rich feedstock used for making the lignin-oil is relatively richer in aromatics stemmîng from lignin. The cyclohexane products of hydrodeoxygenation of both lignin and lignocellulose can be the foilowing, but not limited to, cyclohexane, methyl-cyclohexane, 1,4dimethyl-cyclohexane, 1,2-dimethyl-cyclohexane, 1,4-dimethyl-cyclohexane, ethyl-cyclohexane, l,2,4-trimethyl-cyclohexane, (l.alpha.,2.beta.,3.alpha.)-l,2,3-trimethyl-cyclohexane, l-ethyl-4methyl-cyclohexane, propyl-cyclohexane, (l-methylpropyl)-cyclohexane, butyl-cyclohexane. The cyclopentane products of hydrodeoxygenation of lignocellulose can be the foilowing, but not limited to, methyl-cyclopentane, ethyl-cyclopentane, l-ethyl-3-methyl-cyclopentane.
Beneficially, the bio-crude oil produced by methods of the invention can conveniently be further processed along with petroleum based refinery streams, or when mixed with such petroleum-based refinery streams, using known methods including hydroprocessing and/or catalytic cracking. The liquéfaction results in a product stream that is miscible with typical petroleum-based refinery streams and is compatible to be blended with and co-processed with such refinery streams. This reduces both capital and transportation costs relative to prior methods, making it a particularly environmentally friendly way to utilize biomass for generating liquid fuels or organic feedstocks. Through further processing of bio-crude oil obtained using methods of the invention, a drop-in transportation fuel blendstock or other value-added processed liquid product is provided.
One example of a suitable System for performing methods of the invention is depicted in simplified form in Figure 23. Shown is a dîagram of a System with a reaction container (1) having inlets to permit introduction of biomass (B), recycled product bio-oîl (Cl), and alcohol (A). The System will typically also hâve pressure and température sensors for monitorîng the reaction conditions, and may also include mixing apparatus suitable for blending the biomass-containing composition is used to process. It is understood as explained herein that the 'réaction container' can be a vessel or pot, or it can be a pipe or similar flow-through System; where the container is a pipe, feature (1) would represent the portion of the pipe within a heated zone, where the liquéfaction reaction occurs. An outlet is provided in réaction container (1) also, so crude product from the reaction container foilowing liquéfaction can be removed. In the diagram, crude product is conducted from the reaction container to a séparation subsystem (2) such as a filtration subsystem or that séparâtes the liquefied products from remaining solids. The first séparation subsystem can be a filtration apparatus, a settling System, or a flash drum, for example, to separate the liquid product from insoluble materials. The crude liquid material is then conducted to an optional thermal or Chemical séparation subsystem (3), such as a distillation apparatus. This subsystem can be used to process the filtered material, if desired, to produce a recycle stream of product bio-oil (Cl) used as solvent for the liquéfaction process and providing recovery of unspent alcohol (Ai). It would then remove only a portion of the liquid bio-oil product (C), and any oi the liquid bio-oil product not used for a recycle stream is typically collected as the bio-oil product (C). Methods for design and construction of the refinery system are well known to those in the art and can readüy be accompli shed based on the disclosures herein and conventional engineering prînciples. Solids removed from the crude product stream (e.g., residues captured by filtration of the crude product), and/or gases collected from the reaction container, can optionally be used to heat the reaction container via a heatîng element (4). Altematively, heatîng can be provided by conventional electrical résistance heatîng éléments or by direct heatîng from a combustion process, or by indirect heating using heated air or superheated steam, for example.
The novel methods ofthe invention use solvent liquéfaction process to convert biomass solids into liquid form for transportation and/or further processing. The methods involve heating biomass in a pressurized reactor with re-circulated product oil and an alcohol reactant to solubilize much of the biomass material, providing a liquefied product and optionally residual solids. The liquid reactant medium comprisîng recycled product oil and alcohol provides efficient liquéfaction under the température and pressure conditions described herein. They also do not interfère with subséquent processing and utilîzatîon of the bio-oil product, and thus do not hâve to be separated from the bio-oil product. Residual solids can be mechanically removed, either by décantation of the liquid, or by e.g. filtration methods, to provide a crude liquid product, or by flash drum séparation ofthe volatiles from insoluble materials, which are generally non-volatile. The process results in sufficîent depolymerîzation and Chemical modification of the biomass to produce a liquefied product that can conveniently be handled by liquid processing methods and equipment.
The novel solvent liquéfaction process produces biocrude in very high yields with improved product qualifies compared to the current génération of fast pyrolysîs reactors, without using expensive catalysts or excessive hydrogen inputs. The process does not require biomass particle sîze to be as small or moîsture content as low as for the gasification or pyrolysîs processes. The novel process also produces a high biocrude yield with substantially reduced oxygen content, leading to attractive économies. Recycling of already heated product oil can also reduce the need for downstream coolîng and therefore reduce energy cost of the process and make the final heating of the reactant slurry to the desired set point température less energy consuming.
The novel process achieves oxygen rejection (réduction) by forming water and/or carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, and some water-soluble organics. These are readily separated from the biocrude product so that the biocrude product can be further processed. This oxygen rejection reduces the amount of hydrogen require during hydroprocessing of the bio-oil from the new methods and increases the combustible energy content for transportation fuel applications.
The present invention provides a method and a System for processing crude plant-derived biomass to produce a liquid bîo-oil product that can be used as transportation fuel for the maritime sector with no or limited post-processing or be further treated to produce a liquid fuel or feedstock, for example a general transportation fuel, or be further treated to produce high value Chemicals and solvents. The method and System can optionally include additional processing steps such as hydro Processing to produce a transportation fuel or similar liquid product or sélective catalytic réduction or oxidation to provide high value single Chemicals or a mixture hereof. Methods and Systems for converting oxygenated ’green crude' products such as this bîo-oil product of the entrent invention into further processed products are well known in the art. See e.g., U.S. Patents Nos. 4,759,841 and 7,425,657.
The bîo-oil produced by the methods described herein can be added to a conventional petroleum refmery stream for co-processing into a finished fuel product. Further processing of the bîo-oil produced by the methods described herein can include hydroprocessing, and/or hydrodeoxygenation, and/or catalytic cracking. Further processing readily couverts the bio-oîl produced by the instant processes into a useful transportation fuel.
The bio-oil produced by the methods described herein can be used as is as a drop in fuel to be consumed in two stroke engînes such as those found on large océan goîng vessels or stationary engines or engînes otherwise capable of running on heavy fuel. The bio-oil can advantageously be fractionated to provide a fraction more suitable for this application. The bio-oil can be blended with existîng marine fuels, fossil or non-fossil derived, to yield a blend satisfying the requirements for combustible properties in a marine engine, stationary engine or a diesel engine.
As will be readily understood by one skilled in the art, any of the features of any of the embodiments described can be combined.
Examples
Experimental procedure in cylindrical pipe reactors
Experiments were conducted in a close sealed non-stirred batch reactor with an internai volume of 11 ml. The reaction vessel was a thick walled stainless steeï pipe that was closed off in both ends. One end liad an opening that was closed and sealed shut with a boit during experiments. Thîs opening allowed for addition of the vessel contents prior to experiments and careful pressure relief after experiments. Reactions were conducted by addïng up to 3g of both dried and non-dried biomass feedstock, up to 2.25ml of alcohol solvent (99.9% éthanol) and up to 2g of co-solvent prior to sealing the vessel. An inert N2 atmosphère was ensured inside the vessel prior to sealing by flushing the empty volume with N2 manually for a few seconds. The reaction vessel was inserted into an oven in order to heatup the contents of the vessel to up to 35O°C. Up to four vessels could be heated at the saine time. Reaction times were either 1 hour or 2 hours. The wall température of the reaction vessels were measured for some of the experiments and showed a heating time to the set point of 350°C of around 45-60 min. The reaction times were defmed as the duration of the heating of the vessels. This effectively means that the réaction time for which the vessels experienced the setpoint température was around 0-15 min and 60-75 min for the 1 and 2 hour experiments respectively. The pressure during reaction was autogeneous. For some experiments the pressure was measured using a pressure gauge connected to the reaction vessel and located outsîde of the oven. This connection was made through a thin pipe so that the increased reactor vessel volume would be negligible with an increase of no more than 5%. After each experiment the vessels were cooled by an air fan until room température. The vessels were weighed after cooling checking against the weight of the vessel prior to the experiment as a means of verifying non-leakage. The room température vessels were after reaction opened carefully by unscrewing the boit mentioned in the above and left for l hour with the boit only very loosely connected/screwed on so as to ensure complété évacuation of formed gasses. After one hour of évacuation of gasses the weight of the reaction vessel was noted and the mass loss thus becomes a measure of the mass of gas formed during reaction. The reaction vessels were then opened carefully by removing both endcaps of the pipe comprising the reaction vessel and the vessel contents were extracted using acetone. After conducting five runs in the oven it was discovered that complété submersion of the pipes in an acetone bath subjected to 1 hour sonication provided improved mas balance closure and 5-10 wt% improvement in oil yields so for ail experiments following this discovery this became the standard method for extracting vessel contents prior to downstream séparation and analyses.
Data obtained from prior to using sonication in an acetone bath has been adjusted accordingly so as to stilî be comparable. Upon acetone extraction some of the experiments resulted in more charring and pipe wall fouling than others that would require mechanical scraping to ensure complété extraction. The acetone was subsequently filtered on glass liber fiiter (pore size 0.6 micron) in order to separate the liquid fraction for the solid fraction. The weight of solids were determined by drying for three days at 50°C.
The liquid fraction was then evaporated (to remove light species, solvent, water, and acetone) at 60mbar and 45C, after which the residual heavy fraction was weighed for détermination of oil yield. Yields of product oil, solid/char and gas were obtained as recovered masses and evaluated as weight percent relative to the mass of biomass feedstock on dry basis, e.g. per mass of dry wood added prior to reaction.
Experimental procedure in stirred vessel
Experiments were conducted similarly to what is described in the procedure for pipe reactor experiments but instead of using non stirred cylinder reaction vessels a 500 ml stirred Parr batch autoclave was used and gas yield was read as pressure formed (barg after cooling). Cooling was by submersion in an ice bath. Reaction température was 350°C and reaction time was 45min (the time needed to ensure setpoint température was reached). 50ml to 120ml of éthanol was added prior to reaction and 40g to 120g of either lignin (enzymatic hydrolysis lignin from wheat straw), pine or birch wood. Obtained oil was analyzed with respect to its elemental compositions (CHNS-O) where oxygen was determined by différence.
1. Reaction and éthanol partial pressure.
Experiments were conducted following the procedure for pipe reactor experiments using up to 3g grinded pine wood pellets with 0.75 ml éthanol and up to 2.25ml éthanol without addition of biomass feedstock. Pressure was measured and logged. Température was measured and logged with a thermocouple mounted to the external wall of the pipe reactor. The oven was preheated to 350°C prior to insertion of the pipe reactor. The duration of the experiments was 2 hours.
Figure 1 shows the reaction pressure as a function of reaction time for varying feedstock and éthanol loadîngs at 350°C (circles: 0.75 ml éthanol only; triangles: 1.5 ml éthanol only;
diamonds: 2.25 ml éthanol only; squares: 1g biomass and 0.75 ml éthanol ; crosses: 3g bîomass and 0.75 ml éthanol; connected dots: température on secondary axis). For the blank runs (no feedstock only alcohol added) the éthanol partial pressure reaches a maximum of 32 barg with 2,25ml éthanol added and for the lowest amount of éthanol added (0.75ml) the partial pressure reaches a maximum of only 18 barg. This is substantially lower than the supercritical pressure of éthanol of 61 bar which means that the alcohol reactant is not supercritical at any of the réaction conditions and merely a heated éthanol vapor phase. When pine wood is added to the pipe reactor together with éthanol there is a clear pressure increase indicating that gaseous species are formed during the reaction. The pressure increases rapidly after about 2000 seconds of reaction corresponding to a vessel température of about 300°C at which the conversion of biomass is thus accelerated.
It is désirable to reduce reaction time in order to maximize oil yield. This corresponds to ending the reaction after 1 hr after which the reaction pressure is about 90 barg when the feedstock loading is high at 3g. Letting the réaction nm for up to 2 hours causes the pressure to increase to above 100 barg indicating disadvantageous increased gaseous décomposition of formed oil thus reducing oil yield.
The varying quantifies of éthanol reactant added corresponds to a density of the subcritîcal éthanol phase at reaction conditions as determîned by the ratio between amount of éthanol added and fixed reaction vessel volume. This relationship is depicted in Table 1. For ail of the different éthanol vessel loadings the partial pressure exerted by éthanol is below the supercritical pressure. The partial pressure of the reactant alcohol shown în the table represents the maximum partial pressure since éthanol is consumed in the reaction effectively yieiding a drop in partial pressure, and hence also a drop in density, over time. The total pressure in these experiments does however increase over time due to the formation of volatiles, e.g. gaseous décomposition products. Ideally éthanol reactant needs to be replenished as it is consumed such as it would be în a continuous setting. The results indicate that a density of the éthanol reactant of 0.052 g/ml at reaction conditions is sufficient for reaction.
Table 1
Density of the éthanol phase at reaction conditions for experiments in pipe reactors. Liquid éthanol density is 0.789 g/ml at ambient conditions. The exact internai volume of pipe reactor is 11.31 ml. * dénotés pressures obtained by linear extrapolation.
Ethanol loading (ml & g) 0.25ml (0.20g) 0.5m) (0.39g) 0.75ml (0.59g) 1.5ml (1.18g) 2.25ml (1.77g)
Density (g/ml) 17 35 52 0.10 0.16
Ethanol partial pressure at 350°C (bar) 12* 15* 18 21 32
2. Ethanol as reactant in thermal liquéfaction.
Experiments we conducted as described in the procedure for pipe reactor experiments using 1g of grinded pine wood pellets and pure alcohol reactant (99.9%) in varying quantities. The reaction time was 2 hours and the température was 350°C. Varying number of replicates was performed at each point for a total of 14 experiments. Yields were determined as described in the procedure.
Figure 2 shows, as a fonction of éthanol added, oil yield (cîrcles), solid yield (triangles) and gas yield (dîamonds). As shown under these conditions the oil yield is proportional to éthanol added strongly indicating that the reaction chemistry îs dépendent on the éthanol concentration indicating the rôle of éthanol as a reactant rather than as a solvent. When adding 0.6g of éthanol, (density at reaction conditions of 0.052 g/ml) or more, the gas yield seems to hâve reached a plateau and the decrease in char yield decreases but at a reduced rate. At Og éthanol added the residual heavy product obtained after évaporation was clearly not definable as any type of oil product but clearly resembling micro particles of char. Experiments using no alcohol also yielded a distinctly different smell upon opening of the reaction vessels and only dry char was visible indicative of a clear différence between adding just small amounts of éthanol and no éthanol at ail.
Adding the lowest quantity of éthanol reactant, 0.2g, which corresponds to a density at reaction conditions of 0.017 g/ml is sufficient to yield liquéfaction but one skilled in the art would optimize to increase the éthanol density preferably up to at least 0.052 g/ml after which increasing the density further may only hâve a reduced effect on liquéfaction performance. This îs not entirely clear from Figure 2 alone but when determining oil yield by différence, or rather, détermine the liquéfaction performance as a conversion yield following the following équation the results can be seen in Figure 3.
Liquéfaction performance, e.g. oil yield per différence: 100% - (solids yield wt%) - (gas yield wt%)
The liquéfaction performance clearly shows an improved effect of încreasing éthanol reactant density up to 0.05g/ml after which the improvement in effect diminishes and plateaus. One ski lied in the art would ensure that reactant éthanol density is sufficient for adéquate liquéfaction performance meaning that an éthanol density of around 0.05g/ml is préférable but positive effects by either lowering or încreasing density from this point may be manifested depending on tolérance for éthanol loss and increased reaction pressure which can increase OPEX and CAPEX respectively in a commercial setting.
3. Effect of éthanol on product yields.
Experiments were conducted as described in procedure for experiments in stirred batch autoclave with lignin as feedstock. The experiments are similar to what was done in Example 2, except that a larger stirred vessel was used and gas yield could thus not be quantified by weîghing the vessel and the reaction time was very short sînce the vessel was immediately cooled upon reaching the set point température contrary to a 2 hour reaction time in Example 2.
Figure 4 shows the effect on yields (circles: oil; triangles: solid; diamonds: gas) as a function of adding different quantifies of éthanol (50ml to 125ml) with fixed lignin addition (40g). Oil yield seems to follow a linear proportional relationshîp as demonstrated in Example 2 and Figure 2 also. The lack of proper mixing/stirring at the conditions of very low alcohol addition (amount of alcohol < amount of lignin) is lîkely the reason for the relativeiy low recovered oil yields in Example 2 as char formation/condensation on the reactor wall will be more lîkely to occur.
The éthanol reactant loading in the 500ml stirred vessel corresponds to varyîng densities at reaction conditions shown in Table 2. It can be seen that when the alcohol reactant density exceeds 0.12 g/ml both gas and char yield decreases. The gas yield more than doubles when the éthanol density is increased from 0.08 to 0.1 g/ml indicating that a density around that range contributes to a change in reaction kinetics. This observation was equally seen in Example 2 when increasing the éthanol density beyond 0.05 g/ml; however, in this case the reaction time was substantially longer at 2 hours. These results reinforce the conclusions of Example 2 but indicate that an optimum density determined by one skilled in the art is also a function of reaction time among other factors. This further strengthens conclusion that in a continuons setting an alcohol reactant needs to be continuously replenished to varying degrees depending on the résidence time in the reactor in order to always ensure a minimum alcohol density.
Table 2
Density ofthe éthanol phase at reaction conditions for experiments in stirred 500ml batch autoclave. Liquid éthanol density is 0.789 g/ml at ambient conditions. The exact internai volume of stirred autoclave is 500ml.
Ethanol mass loading (g) 39.5 59.2 78.9 98.6
Ethanol volume loading (ml) 50 75 100 125
Density (g/ml) 79 0.12 0.16 0.20
4. Effect of éthanol on elemental composition of bio-crude.
Experiments were conducted as described in Example 3 and the molar O/C and H/C of the product oil was determined.
Figure 5 shows the effect on elemental oil composition (cireles: molar O/C; triangles: molar H/C) as a function of adding the different quantities of éthanol (50ml to 125ml) with fixed lîgnin addition (40g). O/C and H/C are seemingly unchanged indicating that adding more lignîn than éthanol to the reaction vessel has no négative implications on oil quality. The results clearly demonstrate that for the reaction conditions herein a change in éthanol reactant density from 0.079 to 0.20 g/ml has no effect on product oil compostion and therefore no apparent effect on oil quality. Combined with the observations of Example 2 and 3 this indicates that alcohol reactant density is important în tenns of optimizing for product oil yield and less so for product oil quality.
5. Effect of recycle oil in éthanol liquéfaction.
Experiments were conducted following the procedure for pipe reactor experiments using lg ground pine wood pellets and 0.75 ml éthanol to which was added different model compounds to sîmulate the process conditions of recycling oil
Figure 6 shows bio-crude oil, gas and char yields for a sériés of experiments with 2 hour reaction time with different recycle oil model compounds (A: no recycle model compound; B: 1.85g biomass gasification tar product, “aromatic”; C: 1.96g anisole, “aromatic”; D: 2.05g m-cresol, “aromatic”; E: 2.05g hexadecane, “non-aromatic/alîphatic”). Oil yields were determined as the remainder from mass added after subtraction of char and gas yield. This détermination of oil yield cannot distinguish produced oil from recycle oil model compound. It is cleariy seen that adding the recycled oil model compounds anisole, m-cresol and gasification tar yields a net împrovement in oil yield, where char is plainly reduced relative to the reaction with biomass and éthanol alone. The model compounds used for recycling also shows that hexadecane has no effect on decreasing the degree of charring and therefore has no effect on improving oil yield. This is likely due to its aliphatic composition. It seems to be advantageous for the recycled oil model compound to contain oxygen and hâve high aromaticity.
6. Synergistic effect of éthanol with aromatic recycle oil in thermal liquéfaction.
Experiments were conducted as described in Example 5 where the model compound was anisole.
Figure 7 shows a comparison of yields for three different experiments with the addition of 2g anisole to the reaction vessel as a “model” of recycled product oîl (A: Anisole and éthanol only; B: Anisole and biomass only; C: Anisole, biomass and éthanol). The oil yield observed after experiment A is likely unreacted anisole that if given longer time in the rotary evaporator, as described in the experimental procedure for pipe reactor experiments, would evaporaie. For ail experiments the oil yield illustrated is likely too high due to this effect and char yield is thus better used to evaluate liquéfaction performance. For experiment B, adding only anisole and biomass to the reaction, the char yield is reduced and thus liquéfaction improved over just liquefymg biomass in ethanoi only as shown as experiment A in Figure 6. This confirms that recycled oil on its own provides adéquate solvent to achîeve biomass liquéfaction. However, the degree of liquéfaction and the net oil yield are plainly improved where éthanol îs added to recycled oil (anisole) and biomass, as shown in experiment C. This indicates that it is désirable to conduct thermal liquéfaction with recycle oil solvent and added éthanol reactant.
7. Synergistic effect of éthanol with wood tar recycle oil in thermal liquéfaction.
Experiments were conducted as in Example 6, except that the model compound was a tar product from biomass gasification.
Figure 8 shows a comparison of yields for three different experiments with the addition of wood gasification tar to the réaction vessel as a “model” of recycled product oil (A: l .27g tar and éthanol only; B: 2.07g tar and biomass only; C: 1.85g tar, biomass and éthanol). The tar product was added in different quantities due to the difficulty in pipetting similar quantities. The observations are identical to the ones described for Figure 7 in Example 6; however, the wood tar added does contribute to increased charrîng that makes it impossible to distinguish actual char yield from the added biomass. The addition of éthanol does however suppress charrîng of the tar and an împrovement in ternis of liquéfaction is observed for experiment C where both tar and éthanol is added to the reaction with biomass.
8. Synergistic effect of éthanol with actual recycled product oil.
Experiments were conducted as in Example 7 with varying reaction conditions both with and without addition of either éthanol and biomass.
Figure 9 shows a comparison of yields for different experiments where recycled oil was added to the reaction vessel either by itself, with biomass or with both biomass and éthanol (A: 1.02g recycle oil only; B: 1.00g recycle oil and bîomass only; C: 1.01g recycle oil, biomass and éthanol ; D: 2.03g recycle oil and bîomass only; E: 2.02g recycle oil, biomass and éthanol). The reaction time was 1 hour for ail experiments. Recycled oil was produced after répétition of experiments where 3g pine wood was reacted in 0.75ml éthanol for I hours. Experiment E experienced a leakage with a mass loss of 0.19g of éthanol vapors and/or gases during reaction but the results are included still for reference. Experiment A shows that the recycled oil alone will décomposé when reheated to 350°C. It îs however lîkely that reheating to a lower température will cause it to remain intact but it is not thermally stable at a température equal to or greater than the température at which the oil was produced. Experiment B shows that treating biomass in recycle oil alone results in liquéfaction of the bîomass but with an overail négative oil yield due to décomposition of the recycle oil. When adding both recycle oil and éthanol (experiment C) the generated yields of oil (amount of oil formed as defined by the différence between final amount and amount of oil added) is positive with 0.26g (28 wt% yield relative to added biomass) and this number is substantially higher than in the case of non-recycling (16.3 wt% yield relative to added biomass), Experiment A in Figure 6.
The observations described for a comparison of experiment B and C are equally valid for a comparison of yields from experiment D and E; however, the leakage during the experiment has likely reduced oil yield. As shown, a synergistic effect of éthanol and recycled product oil is apparent at both the lower and higher ratios of recycled oil to biomass tested.
9. Determinîng advantageous ratio of biomass to alcohol.
Experiments were conducted în pipe reactors using 1-3 g of grînded pine wood pellets and 0.75 ml (0.6g) pure alcohol (99.9%). The reaction time was 2 hours and tire température was 350°C. Varying number of replicates were performed at each point for a total of 15 experiments. Yields were determined as described in the procedure for experiments in pipe reactors.
Figure 10 shows, as a lùnction of feedstock loading (grams of pine wood), oîl yield (circles), solid yield (triangles) and gas yield (diamonds). As shown under these conditions solid yield remains constant but gas yield drops and oil yield încreases as the feedstock loading is increased. Surprîsingly a high oil yield of above 20wt% is achieved at the highest solid to éthanol loading of 5:1 (3g pine wood). Limitations with the experimental setup sets a limit for how much biomass can be added to the reaction vessel due the low density of wood. It is likely that even higher solid loading, obtainable by compressing the feedstock, would resuit in an împroved oil yield.
Experiments were also conducted in a stirred vessel with lignin as feedstock and Figure 11 shows the effect on yields (circles: oil; triangles: solid; diamonds: gas) as a function of adding different quantifies of lignîn (40g to 120g) with fixed 100 ml alcohol addition. Oil and char yields are seemingly unchanged. This indicates that increasing the loading of feedstock has none to limited négative effect on oil yield.
From this one can conclude that changing the biomass or lignin to vessel loading has limited to none effect on product yields but the ratio of biomass or lignin to alcohol reactant (e.g. éthanol) is of importance. The effect is most notable of ratios of biomass or lignin to éthanol of 1:1 (wt:wt) or greater. If the data is used to elaborate on the effects on yield during contînuous operation the ratio of biomass feedstock to alcohol reactant inside the reactor at reaction conditions is more important for the reaction chemîstry than the ratio of feedstock to reactant fed into the reactor. By increasing the amount of alcohol reactant relative to biomass feedstock fed into the reactor in a contînuous setting while keeping this relative ratio lower inside the reactor effectively ensures a higher degree of replenishment of spent and reacted alcohol reactant. When the ratio of alcohol to biomass inside the reactor is changed it directly affects the reaction kinetics as one skilled in the art would attribute this to an effective change of reactant concentrations (both biomass feedstock and alcohol are reactants). Since these experiments only depict the results of batch mode operation where the concentration of reactants, both biomass/lignin and éthanol, drops over the course of the experiments it is expected that contînuous operation will thus improve oil yield and reduce char yield since reactant concentrations are effectively kept at a constant maximum due to constant replenishment.
10. Determininu advantageous résidence time.
Experiments were conducted in pipe reactors using up 1- 3g of grinded pine wood pellets and 0.75 ml (0.6g) pure alcohol (99.9%). Reaction time was 1-2 hours and the température was 350°C. Varying number of replicates was performed at each point for a total of 19 experiments. Yields were determined as described in the procedure for experiments in pipe reactors. Figure 12 shows, as a fonction of reaction time for experiments using 1g of grinded pine wood pellets, oil yield (circles), solid yield (triangles) and gas yield (diamonds). Figure 13 shows, as a fonction of reaction time for experiments using 3g of grinded pine wood pellets, oil yield (circles), solid yield (triangles) and gas yield (diamonds).
Experiments were also conducted in pipe reactors as in Example 5 but instead of adding a model compound real recycled and previously recovered wood oil was added. The recycled oil was obtaîned after multiple répétitions of the same experiment at 35O°C with 0.75ml alcohol and 13g of pine wood added to the reaction vessel. The results of these experiments are shown in Figure 14 as a comparison of yields for two different experiments where recycled oil was added to the reaction vessel together with biomass and éthanol but treated at different reaction times (A: 2h reaction with 2.02g recycle oil; B: Ih reaction with 1.07g recycle oil).
On both Figure 12 and Figure 13 it can be clearly seen that reduced reaction time yields in an improved oil yield and reduced charring and gaseous yield. A short reaction time is therefore désirable. Increasing the reaction time to more than one hour results in charring and/or décomposition to gasses of formed oil.
Looking at Figure 14 recycled oil was produced after répétition of experiments where 3g pine wood was reacted in 0.75ml éthanol for 2 hours. Experiment A shows increased charring and an oil yield lower than the amount of recycle oil added indicating charring and décomposition ofthe recycle oil. This is likely due to long reaction time as a shorter reaction time of Ih, experiment B, yields near zéro charring (0.01g) and an oïl yield of 0.4g (44 wt%) when the initial ly added recycle oil is subtracted. This oil yield is likely even higher in reality due to dîfficulties in extracting ail produced oil from the reaction vessels after reaction as both gas and char yield is substantially lower în the case of recycling oil than in the case on not adding recycled oil as shown in experiment A in Figure 6. The actual oil yield in the case ot nonrecycling of oil at similar reaction conditions was only 16.3 wt% (2.3 stdev). The oil yield is thus more than doubled and nearly tripled by adding recycled oil. The amount of recycle oil is different (A= ca. 2g, B= ca. 1g), which makes a direct comparison between experiment A and B more difficult. But it is noteworthy that Experiment B does show a very high oil yield with no charring.
One skilled in the art can conclude that is désirable to reduce reaction time to less than 2 hours, and preferably less than 1 hours to reduce the formation of char and gas stemming directly from the biomass conversion and thus impact oil yield negatively. Furthermore, A reaction time of no more than 1 hour is préférable over a reaction time of 2 hours with respect to limiting the degree of recycled product oil décomposition and charring. The optimum reaction time can be determîned by one skilled in the art on a continuous setup much more accurately than in a batch settîng since the latter imposes a substantial thermal lag and a continuous setup will be able to be operated with much greater heating and cooling rates and thereby much more accurate représentation of the effects of even very short reaction times of around 1 minute.
11. Application to diverse feedstocks.
Experiments were conducted în both pipe reactors and a stirred vessel using different biomass feedstock at varying operating conditions. The reaction température was 350°C and éthanol was added for ail experiments. Figure 15 and Figure 16 show the yields of experiments in pipe reactors whereas Figure 17 and Figure 18 show the elemental composition ofthe oil product and product yields respectively for experiments carried out in a stirred vessel.
Figure 15 shows a comparison of yields from two experiments where the only différence is the type of feedstock, grinded wheat straw pellets vs. grinded pine wood pellets. Reaction conditions were 350°C, 2 hours, 1g biomass feedstock, and 2.25ml éthanol. Wheat straw and pine wood yields similar yields and in particular the oil yield is similar indicating that the process conditions are not only suitable for conversion of woody biomass but also grasses.
Figure 16 shows a comparison of yields from experiments where the type of feedstock is either grinded pine wood pellets or dried enzymatîcally pretreated hydrolysîs lignin (wheat straw, 5wt% moisture). Reaction conditions were 350°C, 1 hours, 0.75ml éthanol, and 1g and 3g of biomass feedstock (A: 1g pine wood; B: 1g lignin; C: 3g pine wood; D: 3g lignin). Pine wood clearly yields a higher oil yield and reduced charring over the use of the dried lignin rich solid residual as feedstock.
Figure 17 shows the effect on elemental oil composition (O/C and H/C) as a function of adding 40g of different feedstocks (lignin, pine wood and birch wood) to 100ml of éthanol. O/C and H/C are nearly identical for the two different types of wood and yields a slightly higher oxygen content (and O/C) than the resulting oil form lignin feedstock as one would expect with higher oxygen content in the woody feedstock to begin with.
Figure 18 shows the effect on yields (oil, char and gas) as a function of adding 40g of different feedstocks (lignin, pine wood and birch wood) to 100ml of éthanol. Yields are similar for the two types of wood. Oil yield is higher and char yield lower when using woody feedstock instead of using lignin. This indicates that whole biomass is a suitable feedstock for the process and not just pure lignin.
It can be concluded that whole biomass or lignocellulose yields improved oil yield over using lignin alone but the product composition and therefore quality is similar. Use of lignin only as feedstock does however resuit in a product oil which generally has lower oxygen content which is désirable from a use of fuel perspective.
12. Hydrodeoxygenation of ethanol-liquefaction bio-crude over heterogeneous catalysts.
Larger batches of oil were obtained from experiments in stirred vessels obtained by repeatîng the same experiment several times. Two batches of oil, one with wood-oil and another with lignin-oil, was obtained after cooking 80g of lignin in 100ml éthanol and repeating the experiment five times and after cooking 50g of beech wood In 100ml of éthanol and repeating the experiment six times.
A smaller stirred 300ml Parr autoclave was used for conducting hydrodeoxygenatîon (HDO) of the produced oil sampies, guaiacol for référencé and decane solvent as a blank. A total of eight experiments were conducted. l-3 g of commercially available NiMo catalyst was added to the autoclaves together with 0.16ml of DMDS per gram of catalyst. The DMDS was added to ensure the catalyst remained sufficiently sulfided during hydrodeoxygenatîon. This method had previously been îdentified as working very well in order to achieve maximum efficiency of the catalyst. 3-5 g of wood-/lignin-oil was hereafter added to autoclave together with up to 90 ml heptane (to ensure sufficient volume of the stirred reaction medium) followed by ciosing and fiushing with hydrogen until pre-pressurizing with hydrogen to 50 bar. The experiment would proceed with heating the autoclave to up to 340°C for HDO experiments on lignin-oil and 300°C, 320°C and 340°C for HDO of wood-oil. A single experiment with 39g of lignin-oil and 5g catalyst was also conducted but the oil volume was deemed însufficient alone to be afïected by the stirrer, so after subjection to a combined total of 16 hours of heat exposure at 340°C about 50ml of Decane was added to reaction vessel and the HDO was extended with another 12 hours (combined heat exposure was thus 28 hours). The reaction température for experiments with up to 5g of oil added was held at 4 hours until rapid cooling in an ice bath. The final pressure at room température was logged for ail experiments. Ail HDO experiments on lignin/wood-oils resulted in a pressure <50bar efter reaction indicating hydrogen consumption. Blank experiment with decane only indicated no hydrogen consumption. The contents of the autoclave were subsequently subjected to filtration and phase séparation as water formation was îdentified for ail experiments expect the blank. The fîltercake was washed with acetone and weighed after drying at 30°C for three days. The decane-soluble/water-insoluble fraction was subjected to GC-MS analysis. For ail experiments this fraction had a light orange color and a diesel like smell. For ail experiments the fîltercake comprised visually solely of spent catalyst with no clear signs of char formation. No sign of resîdual unconverted oils were observed for any of the experiments. Char yield as determined on the basis of added oil was 6.6wt% for lignin-oil HDO at 340°C, 6.4wt% for wood-oil HDO at 300°C, 5.3wt% for wood oil HDO at 320°C, and 5.0wt% for wood-oil HDO at 340°C. For the single experiment with 39g of lignîn oil subjected to HDO at 340°C the char yield was 2.lwt%.
Table 3 shows a table with species identîfied corresponding to the résidence time for ail GC5 MS chromatograms. The species identified are automatically chosen as the most closely resembling compound accordîng to a similarity index of above 90 for a database on MS spectra. Table 3 needs to be used as reference when looking at chromatograms for ail of the experiments.
Table 3
Reference table for GC-MS chromatograms showing identified compounds for different column times
Minutes Compound
2.403 water
2.487 Butane
2.587 Butane, 2-methyl-
2.633 Pentane
2.823 Pentane, 2-methyl-
2.883 Pentane, 3-methyl-
2.943 Hexane
3.137 Cyclopentane, methyl-
3.323 Hexane, 2-methyl-
3.38 Cyclohexane
3.493 Pentane, 3-ethyl-
3.59 Heptane
3.943 Cyclohexane, methyl-
4.05 Cyclopentane, ethyl-
4.307 Heptane, 4-methyl-
4.37 Heptane, 2-methyl-
4.707 Cyclohexane, 1,4-dimethyl-
4.84 Cyclopentane, l-ethyI-3-methyl-
4.93 Octane
5.087 Cyclohexane, 1,2-dimethyl-, trans-
5.217 Cyclohexane, 1,4-dimethyl-
5.783 Cyclooctane, 1,4-dimethyl-, cis-
5.873 Cyclohexane, ethyl-
6.36 Cyclohexane, 1,2,4-trimethyl-
6.493 Octane, 4-methyl-
6.607 Ethylbenzene
6.723 Heptane, 4-( 1-methylethyl)-
7.117 Cyclohexane, 1,2,3-trimethyl-, (l.alpha.,2.beta.,3.alpha.)-
7.347 Cyclooctane, methyl-
7.497 1 -Ethyl-4-methylcyclohexane
7.593 Cyclohexane, l-ethyl-4-methyl-, trans-
7.717 Nonane
8.28 l-Ethyl-4-methylcyclohexane
9.31 Cyclohexane, propyl-
10.427 Undecane, 5,6-dimethyl-
11.333 Nonane, 3-methyI-
13.823 Octane, 2,3,3-trimethyl-
14.733 Heptane, 2,5,5-trimethyi-
15.117 Cyclohexane, (1-methylpropyl)-
15.54 Cyclohexane, butyl-
20.277 Undecane
26.207 Dodecane
30.513 Pentadecane
34.047 Tetradecane
37.117 Pentadecane
39.88 Hexadecane
41.16 Pentadecane, 2,6,10-trimethyl-
42.433 Heptadecane
42.59 Pentadecane, 2,6,10,14-tetramethyl-
44.827 Pleptadecane
45.08 Hexadacane, 2,6,10,14-tetramethyl-
47.09 Heptadecane
49.237 Eicosane
51.363 Eicosane
53.763 Eicosane
Figure 19 shows GC chromatograms of the two experiments with HDO of lignin oil compared to the blank HDO of decane solvent (A: HDO of 39g lignin-oil at 340°C; B: HDO of 3.8g lignin-oil at 340°C; C: HDO of Decane at 340°C). The composition of the two lignin oils subjected to HDO is similar despite being processed under vastly different conditions (one was exposed to a total of 28 hours thermal exposure while the other was just 4 hours). The results indicate seemingly complété deoxygenation and hydrogénation of aromatic species to cyclic aliphatics and a fossil fuel like composition of the resulting product.
Figure 20 shows GC chromatograms of decane subjected to FIDO and decane straight from the bottle (A: HDO of 3.8g lignin-oil at 340°C; B; HDO of Decane at 34Û°C; C: Decane from bottle (no HDO)). HDO of lignin oil is also shown. It is clear that the decane solvent is unaffected by the HDO and is therefore a suitable inert filler solvent for the FIDO experiments.
Figure 21 shows GC chromatograms of wood-oil subjected to HDO at 300°C, 320°C and 340°C (A: HDO of 5.0g wood-oil at 340°C; B: HDO of 4.0g wood-oil at 320°C; C: HDO of 4.2g wood-oil at 300°C). Simîlarly to HDO of lignin oil exhaustive dexoxygenation and hydrogénation occurs. The same compounds are seemingly found independent on reaction température but at the highest reaction température the total amount of compounds with lower molecular weight obtained at column times less than 6 minutes are increased whereas the larger molécules at column times longer than 30 minutes are equally decreased.
Figure 22 shows GC chromatograms of lignin-oil and wood-oil both subjected to HDO at 340°C with decane HDO blank experiment as baseline reference (A: HDO of 5.0g wood-oil at 340°C; B: HDO of 3.8g lignin-oil at 340°C; C: HDO of Decane at 340°C). The products of HDO of both lignin- and wood-oil are very similar. Interestingly the lignin-oil HDO yields predominantly functionalized cyclohexanes where wood-oil HDO yîeld both functionalîzed cyclohexane species as well as cyclopentane species. The latter is most likely due to the higher content of carbohydrates and C5 sugars in the original beech wood feedstock whereas the lignin rich feedstock used for making the lignin-oil is relatively more rich in aromatics stemming from lignin.
13. Prophétie example — continuous liquéfaction
Experiments with liquéfaction of biomass in recycled oil solvent and with an alcohol reactant can be conducted on a small scale continuous setup. These experiments provide a method for determining the appropriate ratio of bio-oil or bio-oil-biomass siurry to éthanol reactant added that is sufficient to maintain an éthanol density of at least 17 kg/m3 within the thermal reactor during steady State operation.
The setup consists of three connected parts: (1) feed pump, (2) a heated and subsequently cooled reactor pipe and (3) a non-stirred collection tank with a purge.
(1) A specially designed feed pump system comprising of a thick walled stainiess Steel cylinder with a free moving piston inside serves a continuous supply a prefilled reactant mixture to the system. An HPLC pump supplies water at a feed rate of up to 10.0 ml/min effectively moving the free piston and displaced volume equals the feed flow rate. A pressure relief system is mounted on the water inlet side adjusted to go off at 150 bar. The pump volume îs 490 ml. The water side of the pump is equîpped with both a digital and an analog pressure read out. The pump température is equally digitally measured. A feed mixture of the following is used for experiments: 100-500ml of oil, 10-200g of biomass and 10-150g of alcohol, e.g. éthanol. The pump can be replaced with any pump capable of feeding a siurry of biomass, alcohol and biooil and mixing ratios are retained.
(2) A feed mixture is pushed continuously through an up to 25mm wide heated pipe section to 20 which pressure sensors are. The température is digitally logged before and after the reactor pipe.
A heatîng jacket is controlled with a PID controller and keep the heated pipe reactor at a set point of between 300 and 400°C. The reactor pipe can be 10-50 cm in length. Tmmediately downstream the reactor the pipe is cooled to room température or below (e.g. by runnîng through an ice bath.
(3) A stainiess Steel collection tank collects the cooled reaction products comprising of gas, liquid and solids. Flow is comîng in from the bottom. The volume îs 490 ml. At the top gasses exit through a back pressure regulator adjusted prior to start of an experîment (set point can be from 0 to 100 bar) and this Controls the reaction pressure during an experîment.
Valves are mounted strategically to ailow for multiple collection tanks and évacuation of one collection tank during the tïlling of another. Equally valves can be mounted immediately downstream the pump to ailow for two pump cylinders to be mounted effectively allowing for fully continuous operation indefmitely as one pump cylinder can be manually refilled as another 35 one is being evacuated/emptied through the reactor.
Experiments are conducted by preparing first a slurry feed mixture. The feed pump is filled with éthanol (or any other alcohol), a biomass (e.g. wheat straw or saw dust) and bio-oil (e.g. real recycled product oil or a startup model oîl compound such a wood tar creososte or gasifï cation tar or similar) prior to each experiment. The closed system is then pressurized and backpressure regulator setting adjusted for the desîred set point.
Continuous experiments can be conducted where the first step is ensuring a constant stabile température of the heated pipe zone by setting a set point (300-400°C) on the controller and waiting until stable température. The température is then kept constant throughout an experiment. The cooling is equally tumed on and kept on (or in the case of using ice, fresh is used). When a stable température of the heated reactor zone is achieved and the cooling has been tumed on an experiment can be conducted. Now the contents of the feed pump are contînuously pushed at a known rate (setting of water HPLC pump) through the reactor pipe and into the collection tank. Gasses formed and N2 are contînuously purged through the back pressure regulator to ventilation. Optionally these gasses can be led to gas analyzers. The pressure throughout the system (feed pump, reactor pipe and collection tank) is constant at the backpressure regulator setting. The setup is monitored until the flow is stable and ensuring that the pressure drop across the reactor pipe does not increase over time. When the entire liquid/slurry contents of the mixing tank is emptied the experiment is concluded and the heating is shut off, N2 supply is shut off and the gaseous contents (and pressure) in the collection tank is relieved by slowly relieving the pressure downstream. When the pressure gauge reads ambrent pressure the collection tank is emptied. The liquid and solid sample collected is subjected to further analyses as described in the procedure for examples l through 11. This liquid can be subjected to Karl Fischer titration to détermine the water content and GC-MS/FID to identify light organic reaction products and détermine the concentration of alcohol reactant in the light fraction. The degree of alcohol consumptîon/ loss can be determined as the différence between quantîfied mass of éthanol after the reaction and mass of éthanol added prior to réaction. The mass of éthanol solvent after reaction can be quantîfied by assuming that the mass loss due to handling of reaction products such as during transferring is solely due to loss of light réaction products (water, solvent and other light organics) and can therefore be added to the total mass of isolated products.
These experiments provide a method for determining the appropriate ratio of bio-oil or bio-oîlbiomass slurry to éthanol reactant added that is sufficient to maintain an éthanol density of at least 17 kg/m3 within the thermal reactor during steady State operation as determined by repeatable continuous operation without clogging in the reactor. This is determined by a constant pressure drop over the heated reaction zone.
A defined set of reaction conditions shall be used for the first experiment:
(i) Feed mixture comprising 400g wood tar (model recycle oil), 100g bîomass, and 50g éthanol; (ii) Reactor température of350°C (iii) Reactor pressure of 50 bar (iv) Feed rate shall be 5 ml/min or correspond to a résidence în the reactor zone of at least 5 minutes
The reaction conditions may be changed if steady State cannot be obtained. When steady State has been obtained the following procedure of conducting experiments will be followed where products of reaction are recovered and yields and alcohol consumptîon are determined for ail experiments as described in the above.
The experiment is repeated to verify repeatability.
Based on the determined alcohol consumptîon the éthanol density inside the reactor is determined for the experiment. The density shall be above 17 kg/m3 if no alcohol îs consumed since the reaction pressure is kept at 50 bar. In the case of alcohol consumptîon the final pressure exerted by the alcohol upon leaving the reactor zone may be so low that it corresponds to a density of less than 17 kg/m3. From the determined quantity of éthanol consumed one can calculate what the final pressure exerted by alcohol at 35O°C with the reactor dimensions used. This pressure is used to déterminé the density of the alcohol based on empirîcal data from literature or by comparison to known data collected from batch autoclaves as described in the other examples herein where a fixed quantity of éthanol confined in a vessel of a known fixed volume will exert a fixed repeatable pressure at pressure for a given température. If the determined éthanol density is less than 17 kg/m3 a new experiment, or a sériés of experiments, is conducted at the same reaction conditions but with increasing amounts of éthanol in the feed mixture. Once the quantity of éthanol added is sufficîent to reach the density of 17 kg/m3 the final mixing ratio is registered as the minimal amount of éthanol to be added at 350°C and 50bar. Next, using this newly obtained mixing ratio, a sériés of experiments are conducted in which the reaction pressure is reduced and/or increased to similarly détermine the minimum amount of éthanol reactant added ad varying pressures. The pressure is reduced to 30 bar, and to 15 bar. One may need to conduct multiple experiments at a larger range of pressures or one may satisfy with a few experiments only if a trend can be observed such as e.g. a linear relationship between reaction pressure and minimum quantity of éthanol added to yieid a densîty of at least 17 kg/m3,
These experiments can equally be conducted at different températures.
Furthermore, these experiments can be conducted at varyîng degrees of biomass to bio-oil ratio, e.g. by adding different quantifies of biomass to the feed mixture.
14. Prophétie example - continuous liquéfaction
A continuous liquéfaction plant similar to the one described herein and the one at lowa State Univeristy (as described in PhD Thesîs by Martin Robert Haverly, “An experimental study in solvent liquéfaction”, lowa State Unîversity, 2016) can be modified to conduct continuous solvent liquéfaction of lignocellulosic biomass using a phenolic and éthanol as described herein. The phenolic solvent represents recycled product bio-oil. Loblolly pine mîlled to 91” minus particle size, at moisture content of approximately 8-10 wt% can be used as feedstock in continuous solvent liquéfaction experiments. Solids loading will be 25 wt%, with phenolic solvent and éthanol injected in the extrader feeding System. Température will be between 28035O°C. Pressure will be 27-48 bar, and résidence time will be approximately 25 minutes. Resulting reactor product, which consists of both liquids (biocrude) and solids (char), can be separated off-line. A combination of solvation using acetone and mechanical séparation (e.g. filtration and centrifugation) will be used to separate the biocrude from the char. The biocrude, overheads (light condensable products), non-condensable gas and char will be quantified to détermine a mass balance. Further séparations of the biocrude will be conducted using the pilot planf s existing stripping column to recover a phenolic monomer-rich eut, which will be analytîcally evaluated for future use as recycled bio-oil solvent. The overheads will be characterized using Karl Fischer titration to détermine water production and GC-Mass Spec to quantify éthanol recovery. The biocrude will undergo elemental analysis to détermine carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen and oxygen contents; bomb calorimetric analysis to détermine hîgher heating value; Gel Perméation Chromatography to détermine relative molecular weight distribution; and Thermogravimetric analysis to estimate boiling point ranges of the biocrude constituents. The results from these studies will be compared to those previous studies on the preexisting pilot under the same operating conditions to document the effect of the addition of éthanol.
The embodiments and examples shown are exemplatîve only and not intended to limit the scope of the invention as defined by the daims.
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Claims (23)

1. A method for production of bîo-crude oil comprising the steps of:
(i) . Providing lignocellulosic biomass, and (iî). Subjecting said biomass to thermochemical treatment at température between 250 and 450°C for résidence time between 1 and 120 minutes as a slurry formed with re-circulated product oil obtained from previous thermochemical treatment of similar biomass to which is added a short-chain alcohol reactant in an amount corresponding to between 2% and 150% of the slurry dry weight, wherein the ratio of biomass to re-circulated product oil is within the range 1:1 and 1:5 w/w and the ratio of biomass to added alcohol is within the range 1:9 and 5:1 w/w.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the alcohol reactant is éthanol.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein thermochemical treatment is conducted under conditions where partial pressure of alcohol reactant is lower than 60 bar.
4. The method of claim 1 wherein the product oil obtained from previous thermochemical treatment of similar biomass is derived from distillation of whole product oil and has a boilîng point within the range 200 - 400° C.
5. The method of claim 1 further comprising use of a distillation System to separate reaction products into desired fractions.
6. The method of claim 5 wherein some fractions are used în the process as product oil obtained from previous thermochemical treatment of similar biomass while the remaining fractions are filtered and saved as final product oil for further processing.
7. The method of claim 1 wherein thermochemical treatment is conducted in the absence of an effective amount of added catalyst.
8. The method of claim 1 conducted as a batch process.
9. The method of claim 1 conducted as a continuous process.
ΙΟ . The method of claim 9 wherein a portion of product oil îs removed as final product oil for further processing while a portion is cycled in the process.
11. The method of claim 10 wherein the portion recycled has a boiling point within the range 200 - 400° C.
12. The method of claim 10 wherein the portion recycled is within the range 50 to 95 wt.% and the portion removed as final product oil is within the range 5 to 50 wt.%.
13. The method of claim 10 wherein the ratio of biomass to added alcohol is selected as to maintain an alcohol reactant density at steady State of at least 17 kg/m3.
14. The method of claim 10 wherein the ratio of biomass to added alcohol is selected as to maintain an alcohol reactant density at steady State within the range between 2 to 52 kg/m3.
15. The method of claim 10 wherein the product oil obtaîned from previous thermochemical treatment of similar biomass is cooled to 200° C or lower prior to use in the process.
16. The method of claim 10 wherein the product oil obtaîned from previous thermochemical treatment of similar biomass is mixed with the lîgnocellulosic biomass and pumped into a pressurized System before adding alcohol reactant.
17. The method of claim 10 wherein unconsumed alcohol reactant is recovered from product oil and re-used in the process.
18. The method of claim 1 further comprising the steps of recovering product oil and subjecting it to further processing.
19. The method of claim 18 wherein further processing comprises hydrodeoxygenation.
20. The method of claim 18 wherein product oil is mixed and co-processed with petroleum refmery streams.
21. The method of claim 18 wherein ail unspent alcohol is included within the product oil.
22. The method of claim 21 wherein product oil is recovered in such manner that unspent alcohol reactant comprises between 0.1 and 15 wt. % of product oil.
23. The method of claim 1 wherein thermochemical treatment is conducted ai température 5 between 300 and 400°C.
24. The method of claim 1 wherein the alcohol reactant is methanol.
OA1202200404 2020-04-15 2021-04-15 Methods for production of bio-crude oil. OA21044A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US63/010,079 2020-04-15
US63/122,475 2020-12-08

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
OA21044A true OA21044A (en) 2023-10-09

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