2020 Virtual AIChE Annual Meeting
(757e) Application of Black Soldier Fly Larvae to Convert Municipal Organic Waste to Surfactants and Other Value-Added Chemicals
In the present work, waste biomass is converted into proteins and lipids, the latter representing roughly 30% of the total larval body mass. Lipids extracted using soxhlet extraction with hexane, have been converted into chemical products such as bio-fuels, solvents, and surfactants. This process takes advantage of the capability of BSFL to consume municipal waste streams to accumulate body fat, behaving as living âbio-catalystsâ, thereby avoiding many of the health and environmental issues associated with conventional methods of processing municipal waste. GC-MS analysis shows this to have a very similar composition to coconut and palm oils, i.e. free long chain carboxylic acids and in particular palmitic acid and lauric acid. Thus, BSFL can provide a renewable source of fats, and can be grown anywhere within the world, including developed countries where there are no local sources of free fatty acids. In countries where weather is unsuitable for their growth BSFL can be artificially reared.
This innovation provides a novel and sustainable route to consumer products via an alternative oil source. It can also exert a significant environmental benefit as food waste is a vastly overlooked driver of climate change, with the FAO UN 2011 assessment estimating the total carbon footprint of food wastage, including land use change, at around 4.4 Gt CO2 per year. Our technology therefore provides a sustainable resolution in a sector responsible for 8.2% of total global greenhouse gas emissions (International Energy Agency 2014).