Bioresources and biofuels�From classical to perspectives and trends

This chapter provides perspective on �Bioresources and Biofuels� based on three platforms of bioresource feedstock, i.e., amorphous sugar, lipid, and lignocellulosics. A comprehensive scheme of various possibilities of biofuel production in the three platforms of feedstock that are already comme...

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Main Authors: Kiatkittipong, W., Pongsiriyakul, K., Lim, J.W., Kiatkittipong, K., Wongsurakul, P., Yodpetch, V., Boonyasuwat, S., Assabumrungrat, S.
Format: Book
Published: Elsevier 2022
Online Access:http://scholars.utp.edu.my/id/eprint/34110/
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spelling oai:scholars.utp.edu.my:341102023-01-03T07:23:06Z http://scholars.utp.edu.my/id/eprint/34110/ Bioresources and biofuels�From classical to perspectives and trends Kiatkittipong, W. Pongsiriyakul, K. Lim, J.W. Kiatkittipong, K. Wongsurakul, P. Yodpetch, V. Boonyasuwat, S. Assabumrungrat, S. This chapter provides perspective on �Bioresources and Biofuels� based on three platforms of bioresource feedstock, i.e., amorphous sugar, lipid, and lignocellulosics. A comprehensive scheme of various possibilities of biofuel production in the three platforms of feedstock that are already commercialized or under development is proposed. At present, only lipid platform dominates the production of �drop-in� biofuel in large volume. However, a coming electric vehicle revolution, disruptive technology, could be a threat to biofuel industries either electricity is produced from renewable energy or having carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) or not. Different alleviation approaches are discussed, for examples (1) shifting from ethanol to �Alcohol to jet, AtJ� or �Direct sugar to hydrocarbon, DSHC� in the amorphous sugar platform; (2) shifting from biodiesel or even bio-hydrotreated diesel (BHD) (also called Hydrogenated Esters and Fatty Acids, HEFA) to HEFA�Synthetic Paraffinic Kerosene (HEFA-SPK) in the lipid platform; and (3) shifting from Fischer-Tropsch (FT) to FT-Synthetic Paraffinic Kerosene (FT-SPK) and FT-SPK with Aromatics (FT-SPK/A) in the lignocellulosic biomass platform. Another interesting choice is on biofuel allocation to produce hydrogen and hydrogen carrier fuel for state-of-the-art fuel cell vehicle application. Last but not least, by using biorefinery concept, lipid/oleochemical biorefinery is specially emphasized and some current typical technologies such as fatty acid methyl ester biodiesel as well as coproduct glycerol should be shifted to more valuable oleochemicals are also mentioned in this chapter. Obviously, economic viability for biofuels and oleochemicals production is still a challenge today. Process intensification which aims to improve process performance substantially (with respect to equipment size, time, energy, etc.) is encouraged and illustrated as an example along the chapter. © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Elsevier 2022 Book NonPeerReviewed Kiatkittipong, W. and Pongsiriyakul, K. and Lim, J.W. and Kiatkittipong, K. and Wongsurakul, P. and Yodpetch, V. and Boonyasuwat, S. and Assabumrungrat, S. (2022) Bioresources and biofuels�From classical to perspectives and trends. Elsevier, pp. 165-220. ISBN 9780128192481 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85135924305&doi=10.1016%2fB978-0-12-819248-1.00004-X&partnerID=40&md5=075a6967a3d7bed3f5f41d80c0339f1f 10.1016/B978-0-12-819248-1.00004-X 10.1016/B978-0-12-819248-1.00004-X 10.1016/B978-0-12-819248-1.00004-X
institution Universiti Teknologi Petronas
building UTP Resource Centre
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Petronas
content_source UTP Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utp.edu.my/
description This chapter provides perspective on �Bioresources and Biofuels� based on three platforms of bioresource feedstock, i.e., amorphous sugar, lipid, and lignocellulosics. A comprehensive scheme of various possibilities of biofuel production in the three platforms of feedstock that are already commercialized or under development is proposed. At present, only lipid platform dominates the production of �drop-in� biofuel in large volume. However, a coming electric vehicle revolution, disruptive technology, could be a threat to biofuel industries either electricity is produced from renewable energy or having carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) or not. Different alleviation approaches are discussed, for examples (1) shifting from ethanol to �Alcohol to jet, AtJ� or �Direct sugar to hydrocarbon, DSHC� in the amorphous sugar platform; (2) shifting from biodiesel or even bio-hydrotreated diesel (BHD) (also called Hydrogenated Esters and Fatty Acids, HEFA) to HEFA�Synthetic Paraffinic Kerosene (HEFA-SPK) in the lipid platform; and (3) shifting from Fischer-Tropsch (FT) to FT-Synthetic Paraffinic Kerosene (FT-SPK) and FT-SPK with Aromatics (FT-SPK/A) in the lignocellulosic biomass platform. Another interesting choice is on biofuel allocation to produce hydrogen and hydrogen carrier fuel for state-of-the-art fuel cell vehicle application. Last but not least, by using biorefinery concept, lipid/oleochemical biorefinery is specially emphasized and some current typical technologies such as fatty acid methyl ester biodiesel as well as coproduct glycerol should be shifted to more valuable oleochemicals are also mentioned in this chapter. Obviously, economic viability for biofuels and oleochemicals production is still a challenge today. Process intensification which aims to improve process performance substantially (with respect to equipment size, time, energy, etc.) is encouraged and illustrated as an example along the chapter. © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
format Book
author Kiatkittipong, W.
Pongsiriyakul, K.
Lim, J.W.
Kiatkittipong, K.
Wongsurakul, P.
Yodpetch, V.
Boonyasuwat, S.
Assabumrungrat, S.
spellingShingle Kiatkittipong, W.
Pongsiriyakul, K.
Lim, J.W.
Kiatkittipong, K.
Wongsurakul, P.
Yodpetch, V.
Boonyasuwat, S.
Assabumrungrat, S.
Bioresources and biofuels�From classical to perspectives and trends
author_facet Kiatkittipong, W.
Pongsiriyakul, K.
Lim, J.W.
Kiatkittipong, K.
Wongsurakul, P.
Yodpetch, V.
Boonyasuwat, S.
Assabumrungrat, S.
author_sort Kiatkittipong, W.
title Bioresources and biofuels�From classical to perspectives and trends
title_short Bioresources and biofuels�From classical to perspectives and trends
title_full Bioresources and biofuels�From classical to perspectives and trends
title_fullStr Bioresources and biofuels�From classical to perspectives and trends
title_full_unstemmed Bioresources and biofuels�From classical to perspectives and trends
title_sort bioresources and biofuels�from classical to perspectives and trends
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2022
url http://scholars.utp.edu.my/id/eprint/34110/
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85135924305&doi=10.1016%2fB978-0-12-819248-1.00004-X&partnerID=40&md5=075a6967a3d7bed3f5f41d80c0339f1f
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score 13.214268