APPLICATION OF PROCESS SYSTEMS ENGINEERING TOOLS AND METHODS TO FERMENTATION-BASED BIOREFINERIES

Biofuels produced from lignocellulosic biomass via the fermentation platform are sustainable energy alternatives to fossil fuels. Process Systems Engineering (PSE) uses computer-based tools and methods to design, simulate and optimize processes. Application of PSE tools to the design of economic bio...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Darkwah, Kwabena
Format: Others
Published: UKnowledge 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://uknowledge.uky.edu/cme_etds/83
https://uknowledge.uky.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1085&context=cme_etds
id ndltd-uky.edu-oai-uknowledge.uky.edu-cme_etds-1085
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-uky.edu-oai-uknowledge.uky.edu-cme_etds-10852019-10-16T04:24:34Z APPLICATION OF PROCESS SYSTEMS ENGINEERING TOOLS AND METHODS TO FERMENTATION-BASED BIOREFINERIES Darkwah, Kwabena Biofuels produced from lignocellulosic biomass via the fermentation platform are sustainable energy alternatives to fossil fuels. Process Systems Engineering (PSE) uses computer-based tools and methods to design, simulate and optimize processes. Application of PSE tools to the design of economic biorefinery processes requires the development of simulation approaches that can be integrated with existing, mature PSE tools used to optimize traditional refineries, such as Aspen Plus. Current unit operation models lack the ability to describe unsteady state fermentation processes, link unsteady state fermentation with in situ separations, and optimize these processes for competing factors (e.g., yield and productivity). This work applies a novel architecture of commercial PSE tools, Aspen Plus and MATLAB, to develop techniques to simulate time-dependent fermentation without and with in situ separations for process design, analyses and optimization of the operating conditions. Traditional batch fermentation simulations with in situ separations decouple these interdependent steps in a separate “steady state” reactor followed by an equilibrium separation of the final fermentation broth. A typical mechanistic system of ordinary differential equations (ODEs) describing a batch fermentation does not fit the standard built-in power law reaction kinetics model in Aspen Plus. To circumvent this challenge, a novel platform that links the batch reactor to a FORTRAN user kinetics subroutine (incorporates the ODEs) combined with component substitution (to simulate non-databank components) is utilized to simulate an unsteady state batch and in situ gas stripping process. The resulting model system predicts the product profile to be sensitive to the gas flow rate unlike previous “steady state” simulations. This demonstrates the importance of linking a time-dependent fermentation model to the fermentation environment for the design and analyses of fermentation processes. A novel platform linking the genetic algorithm multi-objective and single-objective optimizations in MATLAB to the unsteady state batch fermentation simulation in Aspen Plus through a component object module communication platform is utilized to optimize the operating conditions of a typical batch fermentation process. Two major contributions are: prior concentration of sugars from a typical lignocellulosic hydrolysate may be needed and with a higher initial sugar concentration, the fermentation process must be integrated with an in situ separation process to optimize the performance of fermentation processes. With this framework, fermentation experimentalists can use the full suite of PSE tools and methods to integrate biorefineries and refineries and as a decision-support tool to guide the design, analyses and optimization of fermentation-based biorefineries. 2018-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://uknowledge.uky.edu/cme_etds/83 https://uknowledge.uky.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1085&context=cme_etds Theses and Dissertations--Chemical and Materials Engineering UKnowledge Lignocellulosic biomass Aspen Plus unsteady state simulation FORTRAN user kinetics subroutine Multi-objective optimization Sugar platform Biochemical and Biomolecular Engineering Chemical Engineering
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Lignocellulosic biomass
Aspen Plus unsteady state simulation
FORTRAN user kinetics subroutine
Multi-objective optimization
Sugar platform
Biochemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Chemical Engineering
spellingShingle Lignocellulosic biomass
Aspen Plus unsteady state simulation
FORTRAN user kinetics subroutine
Multi-objective optimization
Sugar platform
Biochemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Darkwah, Kwabena
APPLICATION OF PROCESS SYSTEMS ENGINEERING TOOLS AND METHODS TO FERMENTATION-BASED BIOREFINERIES
description Biofuels produced from lignocellulosic biomass via the fermentation platform are sustainable energy alternatives to fossil fuels. Process Systems Engineering (PSE) uses computer-based tools and methods to design, simulate and optimize processes. Application of PSE tools to the design of economic biorefinery processes requires the development of simulation approaches that can be integrated with existing, mature PSE tools used to optimize traditional refineries, such as Aspen Plus. Current unit operation models lack the ability to describe unsteady state fermentation processes, link unsteady state fermentation with in situ separations, and optimize these processes for competing factors (e.g., yield and productivity). This work applies a novel architecture of commercial PSE tools, Aspen Plus and MATLAB, to develop techniques to simulate time-dependent fermentation without and with in situ separations for process design, analyses and optimization of the operating conditions. Traditional batch fermentation simulations with in situ separations decouple these interdependent steps in a separate “steady state” reactor followed by an equilibrium separation of the final fermentation broth. A typical mechanistic system of ordinary differential equations (ODEs) describing a batch fermentation does not fit the standard built-in power law reaction kinetics model in Aspen Plus. To circumvent this challenge, a novel platform that links the batch reactor to a FORTRAN user kinetics subroutine (incorporates the ODEs) combined with component substitution (to simulate non-databank components) is utilized to simulate an unsteady state batch and in situ gas stripping process. The resulting model system predicts the product profile to be sensitive to the gas flow rate unlike previous “steady state” simulations. This demonstrates the importance of linking a time-dependent fermentation model to the fermentation environment for the design and analyses of fermentation processes. A novel platform linking the genetic algorithm multi-objective and single-objective optimizations in MATLAB to the unsteady state batch fermentation simulation in Aspen Plus through a component object module communication platform is utilized to optimize the operating conditions of a typical batch fermentation process. Two major contributions are: prior concentration of sugars from a typical lignocellulosic hydrolysate may be needed and with a higher initial sugar concentration, the fermentation process must be integrated with an in situ separation process to optimize the performance of fermentation processes. With this framework, fermentation experimentalists can use the full suite of PSE tools and methods to integrate biorefineries and refineries and as a decision-support tool to guide the design, analyses and optimization of fermentation-based biorefineries.
author Darkwah, Kwabena
author_facet Darkwah, Kwabena
author_sort Darkwah, Kwabena
title APPLICATION OF PROCESS SYSTEMS ENGINEERING TOOLS AND METHODS TO FERMENTATION-BASED BIOREFINERIES
title_short APPLICATION OF PROCESS SYSTEMS ENGINEERING TOOLS AND METHODS TO FERMENTATION-BASED BIOREFINERIES
title_full APPLICATION OF PROCESS SYSTEMS ENGINEERING TOOLS AND METHODS TO FERMENTATION-BASED BIOREFINERIES
title_fullStr APPLICATION OF PROCESS SYSTEMS ENGINEERING TOOLS AND METHODS TO FERMENTATION-BASED BIOREFINERIES
title_full_unstemmed APPLICATION OF PROCESS SYSTEMS ENGINEERING TOOLS AND METHODS TO FERMENTATION-BASED BIOREFINERIES
title_sort application of process systems engineering tools and methods to fermentation-based biorefineries
publisher UKnowledge
publishDate 2018
url https://uknowledge.uky.edu/cme_etds/83
https://uknowledge.uky.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1085&context=cme_etds
work_keys_str_mv AT darkwahkwabena applicationofprocesssystemsengineeringtoolsandmethodstofermentationbasedbiorefineries
_version_ 1719269149834739712