An Environmental and Economic Analysis of Flocculation Technology Applied to a Corn-Based Ethanol Plant

The stimulation of renewable fuel production is related to the environmental issues resulting from the extraction and utilization of fossil fuels. Although corn-based ethanol is one of the leading renewable fuels and promises to mitigate these environmental impacts, it generates large volumes of was...

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Main Authors: Maria da Conceição T. B. e Oliveira, Kurt A. Rosentrater
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-02-01
Series:Processes
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9717/8/3/271
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spelling doaj-40a2cad9b53c4f8bb7ace6b1ee75d8712020-11-25T03:02:16ZengMDPI AGProcesses2227-97172020-02-018327110.3390/pr8030271pr8030271An Environmental and Economic Analysis of Flocculation Technology Applied to a Corn-Based Ethanol PlantMaria da Conceição T. B. e Oliveira0Kurt A. Rosentrater1Department of Agricultural and Environmental Engineering, Federal University of Mato Grosso, Rondonópolis 78700, BrazilDepartment of Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering, Iowa State University, Ames 50011, USAThe stimulation of renewable fuel production is related to the environmental issues resulting from the extraction and utilization of fossil fuels. Although corn-based ethanol is one of the leading renewable fuels and promises to mitigate these environmental impacts, it generates large volumes of wastewater with high concentrations of organic material (COD<sub>cr</sub> &gt; 30,000 mg/L) and low pH (3.5&#8722;4.5), which leads to serious environmental concerns. A common method of treatment of distillery wastewater is the Dry Distilled Grain Soluble (DDGS) process, which separates liquid and solid fractions; however, a disadvantage of this process is its high energy consumption. Other commonly implemented methods are often costly and not environmentally safe. To minimize these problems, a flocculation process can be applied as a potential lower energy consumption process utilizing bioflocculants, which have been proven harmless to the environment. Therefore, the main goal of this study was to analyze the economic and environmental impacts of using bioflocculants instead of evaporation process in a corn-based ethanol plant. The procedures were evaluated by analyzing the Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) and Techno-Economic Analysis (TEA). From the results, it can be seen that the flocculation system can be an alternative process for effectively minimizing energy consumption during the production of DDGS, Distilled Wet Grains with Solubles (DWGS), and corn oil. The flocculation process achieved a significantly (28%) lower utility cost when compared to the conventional system. However, the overall fixed costs and annual operating costs for the flocculation system were higher than those of the conventional system. Additionally, both processes resulted in negative profit and a sensitivity analysis showed that the feedstocks cost substantially impacted the DDGS, DWGS, and corn oil production costs. Related to environmental aspects, the LCA results showed that the flocculation process achieved the lowest Global Warming Potential (GWP) of the several electricity supply technologies analyzed and presented a significant reduction in CO<sub>2</sub> equivalent emissions when compared to a conventional system. The flocculation process resulted in approximately 57% lower greenhouse gas emissions.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9717/8/3/271ethanolwastewaterbioflocculants
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maria da Conceição T. B. e Oliveira
Kurt A. Rosentrater
spellingShingle Maria da Conceição T. B. e Oliveira
Kurt A. Rosentrater
An Environmental and Economic Analysis of Flocculation Technology Applied to a Corn-Based Ethanol Plant
Processes
ethanol
wastewater
bioflocculants
author_facet Maria da Conceição T. B. e Oliveira
Kurt A. Rosentrater
author_sort Maria da Conceição T. B. e Oliveira
title An Environmental and Economic Analysis of Flocculation Technology Applied to a Corn-Based Ethanol Plant
title_short An Environmental and Economic Analysis of Flocculation Technology Applied to a Corn-Based Ethanol Plant
title_full An Environmental and Economic Analysis of Flocculation Technology Applied to a Corn-Based Ethanol Plant
title_fullStr An Environmental and Economic Analysis of Flocculation Technology Applied to a Corn-Based Ethanol Plant
title_full_unstemmed An Environmental and Economic Analysis of Flocculation Technology Applied to a Corn-Based Ethanol Plant
title_sort environmental and economic analysis of flocculation technology applied to a corn-based ethanol plant
publisher MDPI AG
series Processes
issn 2227-9717
publishDate 2020-02-01
description The stimulation of renewable fuel production is related to the environmental issues resulting from the extraction and utilization of fossil fuels. Although corn-based ethanol is one of the leading renewable fuels and promises to mitigate these environmental impacts, it generates large volumes of wastewater with high concentrations of organic material (COD<sub>cr</sub> &gt; 30,000 mg/L) and low pH (3.5&#8722;4.5), which leads to serious environmental concerns. A common method of treatment of distillery wastewater is the Dry Distilled Grain Soluble (DDGS) process, which separates liquid and solid fractions; however, a disadvantage of this process is its high energy consumption. Other commonly implemented methods are often costly and not environmentally safe. To minimize these problems, a flocculation process can be applied as a potential lower energy consumption process utilizing bioflocculants, which have been proven harmless to the environment. Therefore, the main goal of this study was to analyze the economic and environmental impacts of using bioflocculants instead of evaporation process in a corn-based ethanol plant. The procedures were evaluated by analyzing the Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) and Techno-Economic Analysis (TEA). From the results, it can be seen that the flocculation system can be an alternative process for effectively minimizing energy consumption during the production of DDGS, Distilled Wet Grains with Solubles (DWGS), and corn oil. The flocculation process achieved a significantly (28%) lower utility cost when compared to the conventional system. However, the overall fixed costs and annual operating costs for the flocculation system were higher than those of the conventional system. Additionally, both processes resulted in negative profit and a sensitivity analysis showed that the feedstocks cost substantially impacted the DDGS, DWGS, and corn oil production costs. Related to environmental aspects, the LCA results showed that the flocculation process achieved the lowest Global Warming Potential (GWP) of the several electricity supply technologies analyzed and presented a significant reduction in CO<sub>2</sub> equivalent emissions when compared to a conventional system. The flocculation process resulted in approximately 57% lower greenhouse gas emissions.
topic ethanol
wastewater
bioflocculants
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9717/8/3/271
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