4.6 Article

Technoeconomic Assessment of a Biomass Pretreatment plus Ionic Liquid Recovery Process with Aprotic and Choline Derived Ionic Liquids

Journal

ACS SUSTAINABLE CHEMISTRY & ENGINEERING
Volume 9, Issue 25, Pages 8467-8476

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssuschemeng.1c01361

Keywords

Water washing step; Saccharification; Vapor-liquid equilibria; Thermodynamic modeling; Ionic liquid recovery simulation; Cost estimation

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades [CTQ2017-88623-R, PRE2018-083389, PRE2018-083728]
  2. Comunidad de Madrid [P2018/EMT-4348]

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This study offers a technoeconomical analysis of the IL recovery step in a real biorefinery pretreatment process by analyzing the influence of washing water volumes on enzymatic hydrolysis and IL recovery costs. The results showed that incremental volumes of water led to higher operating costs in the IL recovery step, which can be compensated with less IL makeup costs.
Ionic liquids have shown promising results in biomass pretreatment; however, an extensive water washing step is necessary. This fact increases not only the processing costs but also those associated with the ionic liquid recovery step. In this work, Eucalyptus globulus wood pretreated with two acetate-based ionic liquids, namely 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium acetate and choline acetate, has been washed with increasing volumes of water in order to analyze the influence of the amount of washing water used on the subsequent enzymatic hydrolysis stage and on the IL recovery costs. Vapor-liquid equilibria data of recovered ionic liquid/water mixtures have been determined to simulate the IL recovery step with Aspen Plus, calculating the operating costs using the Aspen Plus Economics Analyzer afterward. [Emim][OAc] was more efficiently washed and more effective toward wood pretreatment than [Ch][OAc]. Both IL/water systems were successfully modeled, and simulation studies showed that incremental volumes of water led to higher operating costs in the IL recovery step that are compensated with less IL makeup costs. Therefore, this work offers a technoeconomical analysis of the IL recovery step in a real biorefinery pretreatment process as a function of the volume of water used in the pretreated wood washing stage.

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