The forest biorefinery and its implementation in the pulp and paper industry: Energy overview |
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Authors: | Maryam Moshkelani Mariya Marinova Michel Perrier Jean Paris |
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Affiliation: | Department of Chemical Engineering, École Polytechnique de Montréal, C.P.6079, Succ. Centre-ville Montréal (Quebec), Canada H3C3A7 |
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Abstract: | Incorporating a biorefinery unit to an operating Kraft pulping process has significant technological, economic and social advantages over the construction of a grassroot biorefinery. Also, the conversion of a Kraft mill from total pulp making to complete biorefinery can be done in a stepwise fashion and so give a company that envisages such transformation the opportunity to master the new technologies, evaluate options and develop an appropriate business plan. In all cases however, the road to conversion presents serious challenges. As components of the wood such as lignin or hemicelluloses are withdrawn from the Kraft pulp line, the heat production capacity from the recovery boiler where they are currently burnt is diminished. At the same time the operation of the added biorefinery unit increases the steam demand. In order to avoid fossil fuel dependency, the total site must be highly integrated and optimized. The application of an intensive and innovative energy optimization methodology to actual case studies has shown that the green, low GHG emissions biorefinery is feasible. The economics can be attractive for a site combining specialty wood pulp and bio-product, biomass gasification, power cogeneration and heat upgrading by optimally positioned and designed absorption heat cycles. The methodology has been applied to biorefining technologies for lignin and hemicelluloses extraction and valorisation, both technologies being coupled with gasification of wood residue. |
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