Prediction of microalgae hydrothermal liquefaction products from feedstock biochemical composition

Hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL) uses water under elevated temperatures and pressures (200-350 degree C, 5-20 MPa) to convert biomass into liquid "biocrude" oil. Despite extensive reports on factors influencing microalgae cell composition during cultivation and separate reports on HTL produ...

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Published inGreen chemistry : an international journal and green chemistry resource : GC Vol. 17; no. 6; pp. 3584 - 3599
Main Authors Leow, Shijie, Witter, John R, Vardon, Derek R, Sharma, Brajendra K, Guest, Jeremy S, Strathmann, Timothy J
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Royal Society of Chemistry 01.01.2015
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Summary:Hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL) uses water under elevated temperatures and pressures (200-350 degree C, 5-20 MPa) to convert biomass into liquid "biocrude" oil. Despite extensive reports on factors influencing microalgae cell composition during cultivation and separate reports on HTL products linked to cell composition, the field still lacks a quantitative model to predict HTL conversion product yield and qualities from feedstock biochemical composition; the tailoring of microalgae feedstock for downstream conversion is a unique and critical aspect of microalgae biofuels that must be leveraged upon for optimization of the whole process. This study developed predictive relationships for HTL biocrude yield and other conversion product characteristics based on HTL of Nannochloropsis oculatabatches harvested with a wide range of compositions (23-59% dw lipids, 58-17% dw proteins, 12-22% dw carbohydrates) and a defatted batch (0% dw lipids, 75% dw proteins, 19% dw carbohydrates). HTL biocrude yield (33-68% dw) and carbon distribution (49-83%) increased in proportion to the fatty acid (FA) content. A component additivity model (predicting biocrude yield from lipid, protein, and carbohydrates) was more accurate predicting literature yields for diverse microalgae species than previous additivity models derived from model compounds. FA profiling of the biocrude product showed strong links to the initial feedstock FA profile of the lipid component, demonstrating that HTL acts as a water-based extraction process for FAs; the remainder non-FA structural components could be represented using the defatted batch. These findings were used to introduce a new FA-based model that predicts biocrude oil yields along with other critical parameters, and is capable of adjusting for the wide variations in HTL methodology and microalgae species through the defatted batch. The FA model was linked to an upstream cultivation model (Phototrophic Process Model), providing for the first time an integrated modeling framework to overcome a critical barrier to microalgae-derived HTL biofuels and enable predictive analysis of the overall microalgal-to-biofuel process.
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USDOE
AC36-08GO28308
NREL/JA-5100-64673
ISSN:1463-9262
1463-9270
DOI:10.1039/c5gc00574d