Bioethanol separation by a new pass-through distillation process

Tamara Janković, Adrie J.J. Straathof, Ian R. McGregor, Anton A. Kiss*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

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Abstract

Distillation is the most used separation technology at industrial-scale, but using distillation in bio-based processes (e.g. fermentation processes to produce bioethanol) is quite challenging when mild temperatures are needed to keep the microbes alive. Vacuum distillation can be used to perform evaporation at low temperatures, but setting a low distillation pressure fixes also the condensation temperature to very low values that may require expensive refrigeration. Pass-through distillation (PTD) is an emerging hybrid separation technology that effectively combines distillation with absorption in a sorption-assisted distillation process that decouples the evaporation and condensation steps. This is achieved by inserting between the evaporation and condensation steps an absorption-desorption loop that passes through the component to be separated and allows the use of different pressures and types of heating and cooling utilities. This paper is the first to present the process design and rigorous simulation (implemented in Aspen Plus) of a new pass-through distillation process for bioethanol (∼100 ktonne/y plant capacity), proving its effectiveness in concurrent alcohol recovery and fermentation (CARAF). Combining PTD with heat pumps leads to low recovery costs of 0.122 $/kgEtOH and energy requirements of only 1.723 kWthh/kgEtOH. Alternatively, combining PTD with multi-effect distillation resulted in 0.131 $/kgEtOH recovery costs and 1.834 kWthh/kgEtOH energy intensity.

Original languageEnglish
Article number126292
Number of pages21
JournalSeparation and Purification Technology
Volume336
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Keywords

  • Bioethanol
  • Distillation
  • Fluid separation
  • Industrial fermentation
  • Process design

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