Compatibility of High-Moisture Storage for Biochemical Conversion of Corn Stover: Storage Performance at Laboratory and Field Scales.

Wet anaerobic storage of corn stover can provide a year-round supply of feedstock to biorefineries meanwhile serving an active management approach to reduce the risks associated with fire loss and microbial degradation. Wet logistics systems employ particle size reduction early in the supply chain t...

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Main Authors: Wendt, Lynn M, Murphy, J Austin, Smith, William A, Robb, Thomas, Reed, David W, Ray, Allison E, Liang, Ling, He, Qian, Sun, Ning, Hoover, Amber N, Nguyen, Quang A
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2018
Subjects:
DML
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5065936z
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org/ark:/13030/qt5065936z 2023-05-15T16:01:50+02:00 Compatibility of High-Moisture Storage for Biochemical Conversion of Corn Stover: Storage Performance at Laboratory and Field Scales. Wendt, Lynn M Murphy, J Austin Smith, William A Robb, Thomas Reed, David W Ray, Allison E Liang, Ling He, Qian Sun, Ning Hoover, Amber N Nguyen, Quang A 30 2018-01-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5065936z unknown eScholarship, University of California qt5065936z https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5065936z public Frontiers in bioengineering and biotechnology, vol 6, iss MAR Corn stover Ritter pile biomass storage ensiling feedstock reactivity field storage Other Biological Sciences Biomedical Engineering Medical Biotechnology article 2018 ftcdlib 2020-08-18T09:20:23Z Wet anaerobic storage of corn stover can provide a year-round supply of feedstock to biorefineries meanwhile serving an active management approach to reduce the risks associated with fire loss and microbial degradation. Wet logistics systems employ particle size reduction early in the supply chain through field-chopping which removes the dependency on drying corn stover prior to baling, expands the harvest window, and diminishes the biorefinery size reduction requirements. Over two harvest years, in-field forage chopping was capable of reducing over 60% of the corn stover to a particle size of 6 mm or less. Aerobic and anaerobic storage methods were evaluated for wet corn stover in 100 L laboratory reactors. Of the methods evaluated, traditional ensiling resulted in <6% total solid dry matter loss (DML), about five times less than the aerobic storage process and slightly less than half that of the anaerobic modified-Ritter pile method. To further demonstrate the effectiveness of the anaerobic storage, a field demonstration was completed with 272 dry tonnes of corn stover; DML averaged <5% after 6 months. Assessment of sugar release as a result of dilute acid or dilute alkaline pretreatment and subsequent enzymatic hydrolysis suggested that when anaerobic conditions were maintained in storage, sugar release was either similar to or greater than as-harvested material depending on the pretreatment chemistry used. This study demonstrates that wet logistics systems offer practical benefits for commercial corn stover supply, including particle size reduction during harvest, stability in storage, and compatibility with biochemical conversion of carbohydrates for biofuel production. Evaluation of the operational efficiencies and costs is suggested to quantify the potential benefits of a fully-wet biomass supply system to a commercial biorefinery. Article in Journal/Newspaper DML University of California: eScholarship
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic Corn stover
Ritter pile
biomass storage
ensiling
feedstock reactivity
field storage
Other Biological Sciences
Biomedical Engineering
Medical Biotechnology
spellingShingle Corn stover
Ritter pile
biomass storage
ensiling
feedstock reactivity
field storage
Other Biological Sciences
Biomedical Engineering
Medical Biotechnology
Wendt, Lynn M
Murphy, J Austin
Smith, William A
Robb, Thomas
Reed, David W
Ray, Allison E
Liang, Ling
He, Qian
Sun, Ning
Hoover, Amber N
Nguyen, Quang A
Compatibility of High-Moisture Storage for Biochemical Conversion of Corn Stover: Storage Performance at Laboratory and Field Scales.
topic_facet Corn stover
Ritter pile
biomass storage
ensiling
feedstock reactivity
field storage
Other Biological Sciences
Biomedical Engineering
Medical Biotechnology
description Wet anaerobic storage of corn stover can provide a year-round supply of feedstock to biorefineries meanwhile serving an active management approach to reduce the risks associated with fire loss and microbial degradation. Wet logistics systems employ particle size reduction early in the supply chain through field-chopping which removes the dependency on drying corn stover prior to baling, expands the harvest window, and diminishes the biorefinery size reduction requirements. Over two harvest years, in-field forage chopping was capable of reducing over 60% of the corn stover to a particle size of 6 mm or less. Aerobic and anaerobic storage methods were evaluated for wet corn stover in 100 L laboratory reactors. Of the methods evaluated, traditional ensiling resulted in <6% total solid dry matter loss (DML), about five times less than the aerobic storage process and slightly less than half that of the anaerobic modified-Ritter pile method. To further demonstrate the effectiveness of the anaerobic storage, a field demonstration was completed with 272 dry tonnes of corn stover; DML averaged <5% after 6 months. Assessment of sugar release as a result of dilute acid or dilute alkaline pretreatment and subsequent enzymatic hydrolysis suggested that when anaerobic conditions were maintained in storage, sugar release was either similar to or greater than as-harvested material depending on the pretreatment chemistry used. This study demonstrates that wet logistics systems offer practical benefits for commercial corn stover supply, including particle size reduction during harvest, stability in storage, and compatibility with biochemical conversion of carbohydrates for biofuel production. Evaluation of the operational efficiencies and costs is suggested to quantify the potential benefits of a fully-wet biomass supply system to a commercial biorefinery.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Wendt, Lynn M
Murphy, J Austin
Smith, William A
Robb, Thomas
Reed, David W
Ray, Allison E
Liang, Ling
He, Qian
Sun, Ning
Hoover, Amber N
Nguyen, Quang A
author_facet Wendt, Lynn M
Murphy, J Austin
Smith, William A
Robb, Thomas
Reed, David W
Ray, Allison E
Liang, Ling
He, Qian
Sun, Ning
Hoover, Amber N
Nguyen, Quang A
author_sort Wendt, Lynn M
title Compatibility of High-Moisture Storage for Biochemical Conversion of Corn Stover: Storage Performance at Laboratory and Field Scales.
title_short Compatibility of High-Moisture Storage for Biochemical Conversion of Corn Stover: Storage Performance at Laboratory and Field Scales.
title_full Compatibility of High-Moisture Storage for Biochemical Conversion of Corn Stover: Storage Performance at Laboratory and Field Scales.
title_fullStr Compatibility of High-Moisture Storage for Biochemical Conversion of Corn Stover: Storage Performance at Laboratory and Field Scales.
title_full_unstemmed Compatibility of High-Moisture Storage for Biochemical Conversion of Corn Stover: Storage Performance at Laboratory and Field Scales.
title_sort compatibility of high-moisture storage for biochemical conversion of corn stover: storage performance at laboratory and field scales.
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2018
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5065936z
op_coverage 30
genre DML
genre_facet DML
op_source Frontiers in bioengineering and biotechnology, vol 6, iss MAR
op_relation qt5065936z
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5065936z
op_rights public
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