TY - JOUR
T1 - Hydrothermal liquefaction of Nannochloropsis sp.
T2 - Systematic study of process variables and analysis of the product fractions
AU - Valdez, Peter J.
AU - Nelson, Michael C.
AU - Wang, Henry Y.
AU - Lin, Xiaoxia Nina
AU - Savage, Phillip E.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Nicholas Garza, Yan Wu, Mary Guan, and VJ Tocco for experimental assistance and Thomas Yavaraski, Celine Saucier, and Sherri Cook for guidance with the aqueous assays. We gratefully acknowledge the Rackham Graduate School , the College of Engineering at the University of Michigan , and the National Science Foundation ( EFRI-0937992 ) for financial support.
PY - 2012/11
Y1 - 2012/11
N2 - We investigated hydrothermal liquefaction of Nannochloropsis sp. at different temperatures (250-400 °C), times (10-90 min), water densities (0.3-0.5 g/mL), and biomass loadings (5-35 wt %). Liquefaction produced a biocrude with light and heavy fractions, along with gaseous, aqueous, and solid by-product fractions. The gravimetric yields of the product fractions from experiments at 250 °C summed to an average of 100 ± 4 wt %, showing mass balance closure at 250 °C. The gravimetric yields of the product fractions are independent of water density at 400 °C. Increasing the biomass loading increases the biocrude yield from 36 to 46 wt %. The yields of light and heavy biocrude depend on reaction time and temperature, but their combined yield depends primarily on temperature. Regardless of reaction time and temperature, the yield of products distributed to the aqueous phase is 51 ± 5 wt % and the light biocrude is 75 ± 1 wt % C. Two-thirds of the N in the alga is immediately distributed to the aqueous phase and up to 84% can be partitioned there. Up to 85% of the P is distributed to the aqueous phase in the form of free phosphate. Thus, N and P can be recovered in the aqueous phase for nutrient recycling. Up to 80% of the chemical energy in the alga is retained within the biocrude. The quantitative results reported herein provide the basis for a reaction network for algae liquefaction.
AB - We investigated hydrothermal liquefaction of Nannochloropsis sp. at different temperatures (250-400 °C), times (10-90 min), water densities (0.3-0.5 g/mL), and biomass loadings (5-35 wt %). Liquefaction produced a biocrude with light and heavy fractions, along with gaseous, aqueous, and solid by-product fractions. The gravimetric yields of the product fractions from experiments at 250 °C summed to an average of 100 ± 4 wt %, showing mass balance closure at 250 °C. The gravimetric yields of the product fractions are independent of water density at 400 °C. Increasing the biomass loading increases the biocrude yield from 36 to 46 wt %. The yields of light and heavy biocrude depend on reaction time and temperature, but their combined yield depends primarily on temperature. Regardless of reaction time and temperature, the yield of products distributed to the aqueous phase is 51 ± 5 wt % and the light biocrude is 75 ± 1 wt % C. Two-thirds of the N in the alga is immediately distributed to the aqueous phase and up to 84% can be partitioned there. Up to 85% of the P is distributed to the aqueous phase in the form of free phosphate. Thus, N and P can be recovered in the aqueous phase for nutrient recycling. Up to 80% of the chemical energy in the alga is retained within the biocrude. The quantitative results reported herein provide the basis for a reaction network for algae liquefaction.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.biombioe.2012.08.009
DO - 10.1016/j.biombioe.2012.08.009
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84868452057
SN - 0961-9534
VL - 46
SP - 317
EP - 331
JO - Biomass and Bioenergy
JF - Biomass and Bioenergy
ER -