Net energy analysis of bioethanol production system from high-yield rice plant in Japan

2010 ◽  
Vol 87 (7) ◽  
pp. 2164-2168 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kiyotaka Saga ◽  
Kenji Imou ◽  
Shinya Yokoyama ◽  
Tomoaki Minowa
2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-30
Author(s):  
Carrin Aprinada ◽  
Irvan S. Kartawiria ◽  
Evita H. Legowo

Molasses is mostly used as feedstock for the bioethanol production in Indonesia. Bioethanol industries has the potential to be more developed if the mandate of blending gasoline with 5% bioethanol is implemented. However, some previous studies abroad have shown that mostly the net energy for producing bioethanol is negative. The main purpose of this research is to analyze the net energy requirement if a bioethanol conversion plant from scenario of a bioethanol producer in East Java. Bioethanol conversion processes inside the plant are pre-fermentation, fermentation, evaporation, distillation and dehydration. Method which was used in this research are modelling and calculation made on monthly basis for plant capacity of 30,000 KL/ year ethanol of 99.5% purity. The result shows that the total energy required to produce 1 L of ethanol is 4.55 MJ. The energy content of 1 L ethanol is 23.46 MJ. The largest energy requirement is for evaporation process (62%) followed by distillation process (33%). Thus, the net energy requirement for bioethanol production process is positive.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Piyumali Mewanthika Jayasundara ◽  
Thisara Kaveendra Jayasinghe ◽  
Mahinsasa Rathnayake

Abstract The life cycle stage of paddy rice cultivation can be excluded with a zero-inventory allocation rule for the life cycle scenario of bioethanol production from unutilized rice straw, i.e., rice straw with no applied valorization in current practice. Accordingly, this study evaluates the life cycle net energy analysis and greenhouse gas (GHG) assessment for a scaled-up bioethanol production plant using unutilized rice straw as the feedstock. The process simulation technique is integrated to model a scaled-up production plant to produce bioethanol at 99.7 vol% purity from unutilized rice straw, and the simulation results are retrieved to calculate inventory data for life cycle assessment (LCA). The simulated mass flow and energy flow results are comparable with that of real plants, reported in the published literature, which validates the process simulations in this study. Inclusive of energy generation using the waste flows in the process (i.e., wastewater and solid residues), the life cycle net energy analysis results show a net energy gain of 7,804.0 MJ/m3 of bioethanol with a net renewable energy gain of 38,230.9 MJ/m3 of bioethanol that corresponds to a net energy ratio of 1.20 and renewability factor of 5.49. The life cycle GHG assessment exhibits a net global warming potential of 584.8 kg CO2 eq./m3 of bioethanol. The effect of system boundary expansion up to the end-of-life stage as gasohol (E10), the sensitivity of the key process parameters, and the economic benefit via valorization of unutilized rice straw are further analyzed and discussed.


Author(s):  
Gwandu AZ ◽  
Farouq AA ◽  
Baki AS ◽  
Peni DN

This study was based on the production of bioethanol as an alternative source of fuel using rice and millet husks. Proximate, elemental and thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) were conducted of the biomass. The proximate analysis revealed that millet husk had the highest moisture content of 26.67±0.58% when compared with rice husk 8.17±0.29%. The TGA of rice husk had a high endset temperature of 355.510C and a weight loss of -48.23%, millet husk had low endset temperature of 349.210C and a weight loss of -44.25%. When thirty grams (30g) of the substrates was used, rice husk revealed the highest reducing sugar content of 2.59±1.24mol/dm3 when compared to millet husk that had 1.63±0.68 mol/dm3. Rice husk indicated low yield after 7 days of fermentation period but showed a significantly high yield in the volume of ethanol produced 68.67±17.69g/l and millet husk had a yield of 79.80±0.93g/l. This indicated that both rice and millet husks were potent for bioethanol production with millet husk having the highest yield.


Energy ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cutler J. Cleveland ◽  
Robert Costanza

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