| Literature DB >> 21318462 |
Dan E Robertson1, Stuart A Jacobson, Frederick Morgan, David Berry, George M Church, Noubar B Afeyan.
Abstract
Several emerging technologies are aiming to meet renewable fuel standards, mitigate greenhouse gas emissions, and provide viable alternatives to fossil fuels. Direct conversion of solar energy into fungible liquid fuel is a particularly attractive option, though conversion of that energy on an industrial scale depends on the efficiency of its capture and conversion. Large-scale programs have been undertaken in the recent past that used solar energy to grow innately oil-producing algae for biomass processing to biodiesel fuel. These efforts were ultimately deemed to be uneconomical because the costs of culturing, harvesting, and processing of algal biomass were not balanced by the process efficiencies for solar photon capture and conversion. This analysis addresses solar capture and conversion efficiencies and introduces a unique systems approach, enabled by advances in strain engineering, photobioreactor design, and a process that contradicts prejudicial opinions about the viability of industrial photosynthesis. We calculate efficiencies for this direct, continuous solar process based on common boundary conditions, empirical measurements and validated assumptions wherein genetically engineered cyanobacteria convert industrially sourced, high-concentration CO(2) into secreted, fungible hydrocarbon products in a continuous process. These innovations are projected to operate at areal productivities far exceeding those based on accumulation and refining of plant or algal biomass or on prior assumptions of photosynthetic productivity. This concept, currently enabled for production of ethanol and alkane diesel fuel molecules, and operating at pilot scale, establishes a new paradigm for high productivity manufacturing of nonfossil-derived fuels and chemicals.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21318462 PMCID: PMC3059824 DOI: 10.1007/s11120-011-9631-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Photosynth Res ISSN: 0166-8595 Impact factor: 3.573
Technological innovations leading to high-energy capture and conversion characteristics of a direct, continuous process for photosynthetic fuel production
| Process innovation | System design |
|---|---|
| Maximize energy capture and conversion by process organism | • Metabolic engineering for recombinant pathway to directly synthesize final product |
| • Gene regulation control to optimize carbon partitioning to product | |
| • Metabolic switching to control carbon flux during growth and production phases | |
| Minimize peripheral metabolism | • Cyanobacterial system to obviate mitochondrial metabolism |
| • Operation at high (>1%) CO2 to minimize photorespiration | |
| Maximize yield and productivity | • Decoupling of biomass formation from product synthesis |
| • Engineering continuous secretion of product | |
| • Optimization of process cycle time via continuous production | |
| Enable economic, efficient reactor and process | Photobioreactor that |
| • minimizes solar reflection | |
| • optimizes photon capture and gas mass transfer at high culture density | |
| • optimizes thermal control |
Fig. 1Schematic comparison between algal biomass and direct photosynthetic processes. The direct process, developed by Joule and called Helioculture™, combines an engineered cyanobacterial organism supplemented with a product pathway and secretion system to produce and secrete a fungible alkane diesel product continuously in a SolarConverter™ designed to efficiently and economically collect and convert photonic energy. The process is closed and uses industrial waste CO2 at concentrations 50–100× higher than atmospheric. The organism is further engineered to provide a switchable control between carbon partitioning for biomass or product. The algal process is based on growth of an oil-producing culture in an industrial pond on atmospheric CO2, biomass harvesting, oil extraction, and chemical esterification to produce a biodiesel ester
Average annual total and photosynthetically active (PAR) ground horizontal radiation (PAR) at various US locales
| Locale | Historical average total ground radiation MJ/m2/year | Historical average PAR MJ/m2/year |
|---|---|---|
| El Paso, TX | 7460 | 3460 |
| Phoenix, AZ | 7300 | 3400 |
| Las Vegas, NV | 7190 | 3320 |
| Lanai, HI | 7120 | 3530 |
| Albuquerque, NM | 6990 | 3240 |
| Leander, TX | 6050 | 3000 |
| Cambridge, MA | 4800 | 2380 |
PAR is computed using NREL models based on the ratio of the measured historical average total radiation reaching the ground (Gueymard 2005; Bird and Riordan 1984)
Individual contributions to photon energy losses in algal open pond and direct process scenarios (see photon utilization assumptions for a description). Cumulative contributions are illustrated in Fig. 2
| Energy loss factor | Algal open pond (%) | Direct, continuous (%) | Direct theoretical maximum (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unusable radiation (non-PAR fraction) | 51.3 | 51.3 | 51.3 |
| Culture growth loss | 20 | 5.4 | 0 |
| Reactor surface reflection loss | 2 | 15 | 0 |
| Culture reflection loss | 10 | 10 | 10 |
| Photon utilization loss | 15 | 15 | 0 |
| Photosynthetic metabolic loss | 70.2 | 74.8 | 70.9 |
| Cellular maintenance loss | 5 | 5 | 5 |
| Mitochondrial respiration loss | 30 | 0 | 0 |
| Photorespiration loss | 49 | 0 | 0 |
| Nonfuel production loss | 50 | 0 | 0 |
Fig. 2Sum of individual contributions and accumulated photon losses for two fuel processes and a theoretical maximum for energy conversion. The losses are represented on a logarithmic scale and accumulated serially for the processes beginning with the percent of PAR in empirically measured solar ground insolation. Total practical conversion efficiency after accounting for losses is indicated by the green arrows
Fig. 3Relationship between practical photon capture efficiency and productivity calculated on a barrel equivalent energy basis