2023 The International Congress on Sustainability Science & Engineering (ICOSSE)
Biomass-Derived Blue Pigment (Indigoidine) Could be Less Costly and Have Lower Carbon Footprint Than Synthetic Indigo
Authors
Currently, the yield of indigoidine in the one-pot batch process results in a high production cost and GHG emissions of $29.5/kg and 25.6 kgCO2e/kg-indigoidine, respectively. We find that key cost and carbon footprint drivers for the biomass-derived indigoidine include the indigoidine yield from sugar and lignin monomers, the solid loading rate for bioconversion, the quality of biomass feedstocks, the retention time and aeration rate for the bioreactor, sugar yield, and ionic liquid recovery. By optimizing these parameters to near theoretical limits, we were able to achieve a significant reduction in both selling price and GHG emissions, resulting in a selling price and GHG emissions of $0.86/kg and 0.93 kgCO2e/kg, respectively, representing a six- and five-fold reduction relative to synthetic indigo dye.
With further research and development efforts aimed at achieving the identified targets, we estimate a 95% likelihood of achieving a selling price and GHG emissions of indigoidine of less than $1.6/kg and 2.2 kgCO2e/kg, respectively. These values are lower than the current market price and GHG emissions of synthetic indigo dye, which are $5.51/kg and 4.72 kgCO2e/kg-indigoidine, respectively. Our findings suggest that the biomass-derived indigoidine could replace the fossil counterpart, saving several million dollars.