Encyclopedia of Renewable Energy. James G. Speight

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similar to glycolysis (the fermentation that occurs in muscle tissue and converts glucose to lactic acid with the release of energy), but the use of different enzymes results in different end products.

      See also: Aerobic Digestion, Anaerobic Digestion, Bioconversion, Fermentation.

      Biochemical Oxygen Demand

      Biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) is a chemical procedure for determining the rate of uptake of dissolved oxygen by the rate biological organisms in a body of water use up oxygen. It is a chemical measure of the power of an effluent to deoxygenate water. The test is widely used as an indication of the quality of water. The biochemical oxygen demand can be used as a gauge of the effectiveness of wastewater treatment plants. There are two recognized methods for the measurement of biochemical oxygen demand which are (i) the dilution method and (ii) the manometric method.

      In the dilution method, a small amount of microorganism seed is added to each sample being tested. This seed is typically generated by diluting activated sludge with de-ionized water. The test is carried out by diluting the sample with oxygen saturated de-ionized water, inoculating it with a fixed aliquot of seed, measuring the dissolved oxygen, and then sealing the sample to prevent further oxygen dissolving in. The sample is kept at 20°C in the dark to prevent photosynthesis (and thereby the addition of oxygen) for five days, and the dissolved oxygen is measured again. The difference between the final dissolved oxygen and initial dissolved oxygen is the biochemical oxygen demand. The apparent biochemical oxygen demand for the control is subtracted from the control result to provide the corrected value.

      In the manometric method, the sample is kept in a sealed container fitted with a pressure sensor. A substance that absorbs carbon dioxide (typically lithium hydroxide) is added in the container above the sample level. The sample is stored in conditions identical to the dilution method. Oxygen is consumed, and dioxide is released. The total amount of gas, and thus the pressure, decreases because carbon dioxide is absorbed. From the drop of pressure, the sensor electronics computes and displays the consumed quantity of oxygen.

      Biochemicals

      Biochemicals, as opposed to petrochemicals, are in the context of this encyclopedia, chemicals produced from biomass.

      The production of chemicals from biomass, a renewable feedstock, is highly desirable in replacing petrochemicals to make biorefineries more economical. The best approach to compete with fossil-based refineries is the upgradation of biomass in integrated biorefineries. The integrated biorefineries employed various biomass feedstocks and conversion technologies to produce biofuels and bio-based chemicals. Bio-based chemicals can help to replace a large fraction of industrial chemicals and materials from fossil resources. Biomass-derived chemicals, such as 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (5-HMF), levulinic acid, furfurals, sugar alcohols, lactic acid, succinic acid, and phenols, are considered platform chemicals. These platform chemicals can be further used for the production of a variety of important chemicals on an industrial scale. However, current industrial production relies on relatively old and inefficient strategies and low production yields, which have decreased their competitiveness with fossil-based alternatives.

      The development of processes and technologies to convert lignocellulosic biomass to fuels and value-added chemicals remains a significant challenge. In this context, the major difficulty in producing a high yield of target chemicals and fuels is the complex chemical composition of lignocellulosic biomass feedstocks. Structurally, cellulose contains anhydrous glucose units and hemicellulose consists of different C5 sugar monomers. On the other hand, lignin is a complex, three-dimensional, and cross-linked biopolymer having phenylpropane units with relatively hydrophobic and aromatic properties. Due to these differences in their chemical composition and structure, cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin have different chemical reactivities. In addition to the complex nature of bio-resources, the inert chemical structure and compositional ratio of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen in molecules in biomass present difficulties in the chemo-catalytic conversion of biomass to fuels and chemicals.

      A variety of methods can be employed to obtain different product portfolios of bulk chemicals, fuels, and materials. Biotechnology-based conversion processes can be used to ferment the biomass carbohydrate content into sugars that can then be further processed. For instance, the fermentation path to lactic acid shows promise as a route to bio-degradable plastics and has been demonstrated commercially. An alternative is to employ thermochemical conversion processes which use pyrolysis or gasification of biomass to produce a hydrogen-rich synthesis gas. This synthesis gas can then be used in a wide range of chemical processes.

      While the concept of exploiting the wide range of chemicals from plants may appear novel, the published literature shows that large numbers of metabolites have already been identified and characterized from a wide variety of plant species. For example, over 37,000 different potential and unexploited materials can be identified. These have a wide range of chemical, physical, and biological properties and include phenolics, nitrogen containing compounds, and terpenes (terpenoids). The variety of molecular compounds is vast. For example, in the terpene group, there are six sub-groupings of molecules with a large number of applications including use in anti-cancer drugs.

      Extraction procedures can have a major impact on the availability of these chemicals, and, to ensure optimal exploitation, some of the well-established extraction procedures may need to be revised. For example, in winter rapeseed, the harvested seed is crushed and rapeseed oil extracted mechanically. The residual meal is then treated with hexane to extract the remaining oil, before being used as feed, primarily for ruminants. Rapeseed oil components have numerous applications including use in bio-diesel, and specialty chemicals.

      However, innovative oil-extraction procedures could allow greater exploitation of protein-based metabolites in the rapeseed, which can comprise 25% or more of the rapeseed mass. Research from studies, such as the EC-funded Enhance project, has demonstrated that this separation would allow products to be produced for numerous applications (see diagram) with base cellulose material and some other metabolites remaining in the residual meal.

      See also: Biofuels, Petrochemicals.

      Biochemicals - Production

      Basic knowledge of the mechanisms of common reactions such as dehydration, hydrogenation, and hydrodeoxygenation involved in biomass upgradation processes is discussed in the following section.

       Dehydration

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