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Extraction Rate and Energy Efficiency of Supercritical Carbon Dioxide Recovery of Higher Alcohols from Dilute Aqueous Solution
Author(s) -
Tompsett Geoffrey A.,
Boock Jason T.,
DiSpirito Cameron,
Stolz Eric,
Knutson David R.,
Rivard Allison G.,
Overdevest Mark R.,
Conlon Chelsea N.,
Prather Kristala L. J.,
Thompson Janelle R.,
Timko Michael T.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
energy technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.91
H-Index - 44
eISSN - 2194-4296
pISSN - 2194-4288
DOI - 10.1002/ente.201700626
Subject(s) - butanol , extraction (chemistry) , supercritical carbon dioxide , chemistry , supercritical fluid extraction , supercritical fluid , aqueous solution , alcohol , hexanol , chromatography , solubility , carbon dioxide , stripping (fiber) , 2 butanol , organic chemistry , materials science , ethanol , composite material
New biotechnologies have been developed to produce higher alcohols, including various isomers of butanol, pentanol, and hexanol. The thermodynamic properties of higher alcohols—i.e., low volatility and moderate water solubility—make them good candidates for extraction using supercritical carbon dioxide (scCO 2 ). Here, we studied semi‐batch extraction of several representative higher alcohols, including n ‐butanol, n ‐pentanol, and n ‐hexanol from dilute aqueous solutions using scCO 2 , measuring the initial extraction rates and extraction efficiencies, where the extraction efficiency was defined as the grams of alcohol recovered per gram of scCO 2 . In all cases, the extraction kinetics were well described by a simple first‐order disappearance model and the extraction rates were much greater than the published butanol bioproduction rates. Quantitatively, the initial extraction rates and efficiencies, respectively, for both n ‐hexanol and n ‐pentanol were 1.6±0.2 and 1.3±0.1 times greater than that for n ‐butanol. These results were analyzed for semi‐continuous alcohol recovery and compared with previous literature on butanol gas stripping to evaluate the competitiveness of the scCO 2 separation strategy.