Excercises Flashcards
Which energy carriers are produced in mineral oil refineries besides diesel and gasoline (petrol)? Indicate 3.
LPG (propane, butane), kerosene, light fuel oils, heavy fuel oils
Which are the 2 leading nations in global bioethanol production and which are their major domestic feedstock crops used for bioethanol production?
- USA (1P), corn (1P) - brazil (1P), sugar cane (1P)
a, Explain the term “second generation bioethanol”. b, Indicate 2 major technical hurdles of second bioethanol technology and give brief explanations.
A, Bioethanol produced from lignocellulosic biomass B, Major hurdles – optional answers: - complex pre-treatment for disintegration of feedstock required to enable bioconversion -enzyme costs are still high, since demand of enzymes is high enzyme activities have to be improved and costs for enzyme production have to be reduced - performance of pentose fermenting microorganism has to be improved (mainly for fermentation of xylose from hemicellulose) by bioengineering to achieve high yields of bioethanol -reduction of process steps for enzymatic hydrolysis & fermentation – target: consolidated bioprocessing -economy of scale requires large scale plants –> supply of feedstock for large scale plants may be a hurdle
Production of BtL-fuels via the Fischer-Tropsch-pathway.
a, Describe in headlines the production of Fischer-Tropsch-fuels from wood.
b, By which means can the yield of FT- diesel fuel be enhanced?
Solution:
- *A,**
- gasification of wood 1 P
- cleaning of gasification gas 1 P
- gas conditioning 1 P
- FT-Synthesis 1 P
- separation of the oil phase to get a diesel, wax and petrol fraction 1 P
- *Optional credits for intermediate steps, e.g.:**
- Grinding of feedstock
- pyrolysis
- cooling /washing of FT raw product
B, Hydrocracking of waxes, H2-import, Low temperature process
Discuss the benefits and drawbacks of using algal oils based fuels for
transportation.
Solution - possible arguments:
Benefits:
-algae production requires no agricultural areas food for fuel conflicts can be
avoided
-high biomass & biofuel yields per acreage possible (yet requires high
performance bioreactors!)
-drop-in-fuels may be produced, e.g. by HVO technology
Drawbacks:
-Still poor energy efficiency, mainly due to high energy demand for downstream
processing
-still high costs of fuel production
(-technology still under R&D)