Abstract

AbstractBACKGROUND: Energy efficient alternatives to distillation for alcohol recovery from dilute solution are needed to improve biofuel sustainability. A process integrating steam stripping with a vapor compression step and a vapor permeation membrane separation step is proposed. The objective of this work is to estimate the energy and process costs required to make a fuel grade ethanol (0.5 wt% water) from 1 and 5 wt% ethanol aqueous streams using the proposed process.RESULTS: Using process simulation and spreadsheeting software, the proposed membrane‐assisted vapor stripping process was estimated to require as little as 8.9 MJ of fuel‐equivalent energy per kg of fuel grade ethanol recovered from a 1 wt% ethanol feed stream, 2.5 MJ kg−1 for a 5 wt% ethanol solution. This represents an energy saving of at least 43% relative to standard distillation producing azeotropic ethanol (6 wt% water). Process costs were also found to be lower than for distillation at the 3.0 × 106 kg‐ethanol year−1 scale modeled.CONCLUSION: In this hybrid system, the stripping column provides high ethanol recoveries and low effluent concentrations while the vapor compression‐membrane component enables the efficient recovery of latent and sensible heat from both the retentate and permeate streams from the membrane system. Published in 2008 by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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