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Strategies to improve viability of a circular carbon bioeconomy-A techno-economic review of microbial electrosynthesis and gas fermentation

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 201, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2021.117306

Keywords

Microbial electrosynthesis; Gas fermentation; Techno-economic analysis; Circular economy; Carbon dioxide; Biogas

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council (ARC) [DP160102308]
  2. ARC [FL170100086]
  3. ARC CoE in Synthetic Biology

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A circular carbon bioeconomy has potential to reduce greenhouse gas accumulation and sustainably produce chemical, agricultural, and fuel products. Microbial electrosynthesis and gas fermentation are effective methods, with electrolyser-assisted gas fermentation being the economically viable strategy. Linking water treatment resource recovery with gas fermentation can improve the economic viability of chemicals.
A circular carbon bioeconomy has potential to halt atmospheric accumulation of greenhouse gases causing climate change and sustainably produce chemical, agricultural and fuel products. Here, we report application of a simplified technoeconomic assessment to critically review two approaches in this space - microbial electrosynthesis and gas fermentation. For microbial electrosynthesis, decoupling of surface-dependant abiotic process for electron delivery from volume-dependant biotic carbon fixation, is shown as the only economically viable strategy to scale-up due to comparatively low biofilm electron consumption rate. This is effectively an electrolyser-assisted gas fermentation system. Targeting high-value products, such as protein for human food consumption is one of the few pathways forward for electrolyser-assisted gas fermentation. Alternatively, gas fermentation of reformed biogas presents an interesting and potentially more sustainable implementation pathway to improve economic viability of chemicals. This critical review suggests linking water treatment resource recovery with gas fermentation is attractive for bioplastics and butanol in terms of competitiveness and market demand.

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