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- 2009 Annual Meeting
- Forest and Plant Bioproducts Division
- Biomass Refining: Unit Operations, Processes, and Optimization
- (599a) Controlling the Rheology of Biomass
Processing of high solids fraction biomass leads to a number of difficulties that are not present in more dilute systems. Concentrated biomass acts as a Bingham fluid with a yield stress that increases rapidly with solids concentration. This behavior makes pumping and transporting the process slurry difficult if not impossible. In addition, the mass transfer required in order to mix reactants, enzymes and reagents into the slurry is severely inhibited. Controlling the rheology of the biomass feed is critical for the success of high solids fraction biomass processing.
In this presentation, we describe the use of rheological modifiers to control the rheology of biomass slurries. We have found that by using high molecular weight water-soluble polymers, we can significantly reduce the yield stress of wood fiber and corn stover slurries. Using only a few wt% (based on the dry solid biomass) of these rheological modifiers, yield stresses can be reduced several-fold, permitting the flow of biomass at high concentrations. We will describe the effects of properties of the rheological modifiers (e.g., type, concentration and molecular weight) on rheological behavior, show evidence of the microscopic mechanisms producing the observed behavior, and examine the effects of the modifiers on the downstream biomass processing (e.g., acid hydrolysis, enzymatic hydrolysis and fermentation).