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Abstract Lignocellulose dissolution in ionic liquids is a relatively new biomass pre‐treatment technology that is receiving growing interest from the biofuels community as a route to provide readily‐hydrolyzable holocellulose. Despite its proven advantages over other pre‐treatment technologies – including feedstock invariance, high monomeric sugar yields over short saccharification times, and extensive delignification – there are several core issues that stand in the way of commercialization. These include the relative high cost of the ionic liquids themselves, a lack of knowledge in terms of process considerations for a biorefinery based on these solvents, and scant information on the coproducts this pre‐treatment technology could provide to the marketplace. We present an initial techno‐economic model of a biorefinery that is based on the ionic liquid pre‐treatment technology and have identified, through a comprehensive sensitivity analysis, the most significant areas in terms of cost savings/revenue generation that must be addressed before ionic liquid pre‐treatment can compete with other, more established, pre‐treatment technologies. This report evaluates this new pre‐treatment technology through the perspective of a virtual operating biorefinery, and although there are significant challenges that must be addressed, there is a clear path that can enable commercialization of this novel approach. © 2011 Society of Chemical Industry and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
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Daniel Klein‐Marcuschamer
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Blake A. Simmons
Boston University
Harvey W. Blanch
University of California, Riverside
Biofuels Bioproducts and Biorefining
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Sandia National Laboratories
Joint BioEnergy Institute
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Klein‐Marcuschamer et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d80451ba18484428d18487 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/bbb.303