Introduction

Biomass is poised to make significant contributions to the domestic and carbon neutral production of fuels and chemicals. According to the “Billion-Ton” study [1] and its update [2] by the United States Department of Energy (USDOE) and United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), biomass has the potential to sustainably supply one third of the nation’s petroleum consumption. In fact, enzymatic conversion of lignocellulosic material to fermentable sugars for fuel ethanol is becoming more economically viable [3] with companies such as POET [4], Abengoa [5], and DuPont [6] playing leading roles in the developing ethanol fuel market. However, meeting the US congressional mandate to produce 36 billion gallons of biofuels per year by 2022 will require use of additional biomass resources, including energy crops, forest residues, and other wastes. Figure 1 shows projected terrestrial biomass resource supply curves in the USA in 2022 as farmgate prices increase from $20 to $200 per dry ton. The average supply for all feedstocks as a function of price is also included and is less than the nominal price for any single feedstock. It is important to note that woody residues dominate the feedstock supply while the price is less than approximately $50/dry ton. However, as the price rises above $50/dry ton, the projected quantities of available corn stover, switchgrass, and conventional wood (wood products in harvest today) increase dramatically and quickly dominate the supply. These projections demonstrate that there will likely be strong cost incentives for biorefineries to combine multiple disparate feedstocks in order to minimize resource cost while increasing feedstock volume to take advantage of economies of scale. Besides feedstock farmgate costs, biorefineries will likely have other important financial reasons to accept multiple feedstocks, including risk reduction through feedstock diversification, reduced storage costs through sourcing materials that can be harvested at different times throughout the year, and reduced transportation costs through taking full advantage of all available local resources.

Fig. 1
figure 1

Biomass supply projections for feedstock prices between $20 and $200/dry ton in 2022. Adapted from [7]

Once the biomass has been collected, the most economical process for conversion to fuels, chemicals, or energy needs to be selected. Figure 2 depicts a generalized scheme of the primary processing steps for four key conversion pathways: fermentation, hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL), pyrolysis, and combustion/co-firing. The chemical and physical properties of the biomass feedstock have a significant impact on each of the processing steps during these conversion processes. This review briefly summarizes the primary impacts that feedstock properties have on major conversion options. The differences among the available feedstocks and the conversion options offer both opportunities for potential synergies as well as new challenges. For example, the ethanol production model being developed commercially in the Midwest uses almost exclusively corn stover and does not directly transfer to other locations that have different mixtures of biomass resources. In particular, the Northeast and Northwest regions of the USA have much greater woody biomass resources, including residues from the pulp and paper industry as well as other forest harvesting activities. These and other lignin-rich waste products are not well suited for fermentation but are amenable for thermochemical conversion or combustion. As illustrated in Fig. 1, as demand for biomass feedstocks increases, new resources become available, which may dramatically change conversion process parameters. For example, 15 million acres of southern pine plantations could supply 100 million dry tons of clean wood every year, and the costs of those supply systems are decreasing [8]. The mixture of clean pulpwood and less pure forest residues will impact the target conversion processes. Increasing the availability of information describing the effects that physical and chemical properties of different types and fractions of biomass feedstocks have on the performance of a variety of conversion technologies will provide many benefits. For instance, this information will open opportunities to select and tune conversion technologies to further optimize yields while also achieving other environmental and societal benefits, such as increased global sustainability and economic prosperity [912].

Fig. 2
figure 2

General process for the production of fuels and chemicals through four major conversion pathways: fermentation, hydrothermal liquefaction, pyrolysis, and combustion/co-firing

Another important consideration is that logistics models predict local supplies of biomass for a well-detailed model predicting product output from biomass input. An understanding of how preprocessing operations and natural variability effect physical and chemical properties and how those altered properties improve conversion to energy and fuels is key to developing optimized and sustainable production of renewable fuels, chemicals, and other bio-based products. Tables 1 and 2 summarize key effects of biomass physical and chemical properties, respectively, on the four conversion processes presented in Fig. 2.

Table 1 Impacts of biomass physical properties on four primary conversion pathways
Table 2 Impacts of biomass chemical properties on four major conversion pathways

Physical and chemical properties have direct impact on conversion performance and also indirect impact through their effects on other properties and processes. For example, moisture content not only directly impacts conversion performance but also impacts dry grinding performance and final particle size distributions which indirectly affect conversion process efficiency. In straws and stover, decreasing moisture content from 12 to 7 % can decrease grinding energy by approximately 5 kWh/t for particle sizes 1.6 mm and smaller [44]. Decreasing moisture content by a factor of two can reduce grinding energy by a factor of four for particle sizes between 3 and 6 mm for canola [45]. The harvest season can significantly impact moisture content of biomass resources. Moisture content generally decreases for late fall harvests, reducing required drying energy for pyrolysis or combustion processes but having little effect on hydrothermal liquefaction or fermentation processes [27, 41]. Infield drying for 90 days decreases moisture content of pine trees, even in humid southern US climates, where reductions to 30 and 40 % moisture content have been reported for summer and winter conditions, respectively [8]. In addition to moisture content and particle morphology, variation in ash content, volatiles, and structural carbohydrate to lignin ratios effect a wide range of parameters from specific grinding energy and flowability to product distributions from pyrolysis and fermentation (Tables 1 and 2) [13].

Biomass Composition

Understanding biomass chemical composition and how each component behaves in the selected conversion processes is fundamental to addressing the issues of variability. The chemical properties of lignocellulosic materials, commonly referred to as biomass, are primarily controlled by five key components: cellulose, hemicellulose, lignin, extractives/volatiles, and ash. Cellulose is a crystalline polysaccharide composed of glucose monomers held together by β(1→4) linkages that are resistant to hydrolysis. Hemicellulose is an amorphous heteropolymer comprised of various carbohydrate monomers, including but not limited to xylose, mannose, and glucose. Because of its chemical structure, hemicellulose is much more susceptible to hydrolysis than cellulose. Lignin, the third major chemical component of biomass, is a complex array of aromatic alcohols that are heavily intertwined within the biomass structure and help provide rigidity to the plant as a whole. Lignin can be beneficial for thermochemical conversion processes increasing oil yield and molecular weight [36]. However, for fermentative processes, it has a detrimental effect in that phenolic lignin degradation products can inhibit ethanol production [38]. Extractives are made up of water-soluble components, such as non-structural sugars and proteins, and ethanol soluble components, such as chlorophyll and waxes. Volatiles from hemicellulose reduce fermentation efficiency in biochemical processes [39] and can increase the acidic nature of oil produced from thermochemical processes, which is associated with increase of viscosity during bio-oil storage [20]. Inorganic material, often referred to as ash, can be intrinsic to the biomass structure, such as calcium and potassium ions, or primarily anthropogenic, such as silica acquired during harvest. Ash content and composition can have detrimental effects on thermochemical processes by lowering oil yields and fouling reactors [21] while only slightly reducing the effectiveness of dilute acid pretreatment for fermentation [34].

Variations in the distributions of these five components can be substantial across types of biomass, including woody, herbaceous, and algal. Additionally, there is a significant variation among specimens of the same biomass type and between various tissue fractions of the same specimen (i.e., tree leaves have different structural components than the wood). This review compiles information on broad chemical compositions of different biomass types and tissue fractions while referring readers to additional sources for detailed biomass chemical compositions. More detailed compositions can be found for principal biomass components [46], chemical composition of the ash [47], and bulk constituents like cellulose, hemicellulose, lignin, and extractives [48].

In general, herbaceous feedstocks, in addition to having higher ash content, exhibit more variability in their composition than woody biomass [49]. However, not all characterization methods report identical biomass composition values, resulting in apparent biomass variability that is dependent upon the different methods used to measure the desired properties.

Defining the Extent of Biomass Variability

Biomass variability is a result of many different factors including component analysis methods, feedstock types, environmental factors, harvesting practices, storage conditions, and preprocessing techniques. Some of these factors can be controlled through standardization practices while other factors can be difficult to control. The influence of environmental conditions on biomass composition is particularly difficult to control because they are subject to variations in weather, including total supply and timing of water, daily and seasonal temperature swings, and variations in local soil conditions (e.g., clay, sand, rock, nutrient content, and pH) [50]. In addition, different conversion technologies place varying levels of emphasis on diverse quality metrics, which further complicating inherent biomass variability [13]. As densification technologies continue to improve and as national and global biofuels industries emerge, biomass resources will be shipped greater distances, potentially increasing the variability of biomass received at biorefineries as well as offering new opportunities to reduce variability through wider supply and blending. However, issues of low bulk mass and energy densities must be addressed to keep transportation costs economical [51, 52]. It is important to understand all potential sources of variability in order to expand the current feedstock supply and to mitigate factors that will cause fluctuations in product quality.

Variability within Biomass Analysis

The quantitative characterization of biomass has a long and complicated evolution that includes many analytical techniques. Different methods that measure the same parameter, as well as variations in process execution, lead to variability in reported analytical values. For example, measurements of biomass fuel properties for thermochemical conversion are currently based on ASTM methods for ultimate and proximate analysis of coal and coke [53, 54]; however, through the use of these methods, the variation within biomass is typically greater than that of coal [46]. For biochemical conversion processes, methods from the Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry (TAPPI) for analysis of carbohydrates and lignin from pulps and pulp wood (T-222, T-249) have been used and adapted. The National Renewable Energy Lab (NREL) has adapted these methods and continues to develop and provide laboratory analytical procedures (LAPs) that are specific to biofuels [55, 56]. NREL’s adaptations of these methods has included the analysis of structural components in biomass that focus on using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and UV-vis spectroscopy to obtain information on cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin content [57]. However, even small changes to the analytical methods can have a strong effect on the uncertainties of empirical methods [58]. The full details of these methods are beyond the scope of this review, but a collection of ASTM and other standard methods for various types of biomass analysis can be found in the Supporting Information (Tables S1, S2 and S3).

An additional source of analytical variability is the development of predictive models from spectroscopic data to analyze biomass physical and chemical properties. Historically, assessing the variability in biomass composition has been impeded by the large time required for the analyses. For example, obtaining structural carbohydrate information for a large number of samples can take weeks. High-throughput methods utilizing near-infrared spectroscopy (NIR) combined with chemometrics have been developed to characterize large numbers of samples for major biomass components, such as glucan, xylan, solubles, and lignin [55, 56]. Even more promising, these models can be continuously updated and expanded to increase predictive utility as more biomass samples are added. Recently, Paulsen et al. have obtained in situ biomass structural information using spatiotemporally resolved diffuse reflectance spectroscopy in a reactive fast pyrolysis system for woody feedstocks [59]. This new technique could allow for the monitoring of lumped carbohydrate content during pyrolysis. In the future, these new rapid screening analysis techniques, such as NIR spectroscopy, will likely help to minimize the effects of variability by providing detailed in-line chemical characterization if models are based on standard chemical measurement techniques, such as NREL’s LAPs. This rapid in-line analysis offers additional opportunities to control feed stream composition by blending biomass real-time during feedstock preprocessing.

Chemical Composition Variability between Different Types of Biomass

Kenney et al. have thoroughly reviewed many of the sources of variability within biomass [13]. In order to compile agronomic and chemical data on biomass feedstocks from across the nation, the US DOE maintains a publically available database at Idaho National Laboratory (INL) that contains characterization information and statistical tools to assess the variability of important bioenergy feedstocks [60, 61]. In order to utilize multiple feedstocks for a specific conversion process, variation in chemical properties between different feedstocks must be considered. Table 3, which utilizes information from the INL database and a compilation of chemical data from previous reviews, shows multiple structural analyses on a variety of biomass samples. Pine (a softwood) has the highest lignin content, followed by hybrid poplar (a hardwood), while herbaceous materials have the least lignin. Because lignin has high energy content, the heating values of the materials follows the same order as the lignin. Compositional data like this is crucial to gaining an understanding of feedstock properties prior to selecting a processing or conversion technology. For instance, using the knowledge that softwoods have higher lignin content could make them more suited for combustion in energy applications.

Table 3 Representative structural composition of various feedstocks

Individual feedstocks vary significantly in their composition (Table 3). This problem becomes magnified when considering other, more diverse, bioenergy feedstocks. A prime example of this is mixed natural rangeland grasses, which may be used for fermentation processes. These grasses preserve natural habitat and typically require less maintenance than traditional energy crops; however, their naturally high variability can lead to reduced and highly variable product yields. Species variety in herbaceous crops grown on conservation grassland has a detrimental effect on the ethanol yield per unit area as plant species diversity increases. Ethanol yields per unit land increased drastically with increased targeted coverage of C4 prairie grass energy crops, like switchgrass, which sequester more carbon than typical C3 conservation grassland varieties [63].

While different types of biomass can exhibit distinct composition differences, certain aspects of the biomass composition can be mitigated or enhanced by mechanical or chemical manipulation, such as anatomical fractionation. The chemical differences that can occur between anatomical fractions for woody biomass and corn stover are illustrated in Table 4. Woody biomass contains most of the cellulose in the heartwood (represented by Whole Tree), while the bark contains a greater percent lignin, and the leaves contain a higher concentration of extractives. Corn stover, on the other hand, has the majority of the extractives in the leaves and internodes (the links between different stalk segments). Differences in composition with anatomical fractions can also be seen in other biomass types. For example, different fractions within wheat stover can exhibit an almost 10 % difference in glucan content with some fractions being much more susceptible to chemical saccharification [64]. Increased susceptibility to saccharification for different plant fragments can also be seen in corn stover in which the cobs, husks, and leaves exhibit better response than the stocks to simultaneous saccharification and fermentation (SSF) despite having similar glucan levels [65]. Careful selection of the anatomical fraction processed could allow for greater control over ash and compositional content in a conversion facility feed stream. Additionally, feed stream or anatomical fractionation can improve the economics of a process by separating high value components. This is exemplified by the use of distiller dried grains and solubles (DDGS) in ethanol production for high protein animal feed as opposed to turning the DDGS into fuels or chemicals [66, 67].

Table 4 Woody biomass and corn stover compositional variation by anatomical fraction

Variability Due to Local Agronomic Conditions

Geographic location affects feedstock characteristics through variations in local agronomic conditions. Templeton et al. [56] investigated corn stover composition over much of the US Midwest. Harvest year and geographic location has a greater impact on the structural content of corn stover than does the genetic variety [56, 68]. The variations in biomass composition, especially for genetically similar biomass, can often be correlated to differences in water and temperature conditions [69]. A particularly problematic source of variability is drought, because it cannot be easily controlled or mitigated [50, 70, 71]. Drought can increase the water-soluble carbohydrate content of plants while the overall mass yield decreases [7073]. Drought drastically decreases the theoretical ethanol yield (TEY) of mixed perennial grasses and Miscanthus × giganteus in a fermentative process by increasing extractives and decreasing structural sugars, in addition to reducing the quantity of biomass produced per unit land [50]. Overall, drought reduced TEY by 26–59 % per hectare for mixed perennial grasses and Miscanthus × giganteus through a combination of overall dry matter loss and a reduced fraction of structural carbohydrates [50].

Variability Due to Harvest Conditions

Harvest conditions, including equipment type, process, season, and weather, are another substantial source of biomass variability. Ash, structural carbohydrates, and moisture are due to such harvesting conditions [13]. Delaying harvest for corn stover results in drying and decreased structural carbohydrates without significantly lowering the overall energy content [74], which would benefit thermochemical conversion processes, such as co-firing and pyrolysis, because of the lower moisture content. Ideally, harvest time is optimized to maximize sequestered carbon content while reducing ash content [69]. Table 5 summarizes variation in ash content of switchgrass collected with commercial harvesting equipment for different harvest years, seasons, and locations. Harvests within 2007–2010 collected in Minnesota exhibited the highest mean ash content (9.31 %), while the spring harvests from 2001–2005 collected in Pennsylvania exhibited the lowest mean ash content (2.26 %). Over the same time periods, the mean ash contents of the spring harvests were approximately 1 % lower than that of the fall harvests due to winter senescence. Adler et al. [75] investigated the benefit of delaying harvest to reduce ash content against biomass senescence and concluded that the economics of a delayed harvest would depend on the intended conversion process. If the biomass is going to a combustion process, the reduced ash may be worth the loss in carbon as the biomass degrades but the same may not be true for a fermentative process. Even when harvests of multiple cultivars and locations are considered, year-to-year variations can be still be significant as indicated by a 2 % decrease in mean ash content between samples harvested in 2000 compared to 1999 [68].

Table 5 Ash content variation in switchgrass by harvest season and year

Delaying the harvest time of Miscanthus, a potential herbaceous bioenergy crop, from late fall to early spring drastically decreases ash content by about 30 % while decreasing biomass yields by about 13 % [76]. As Miscanthus crops experience partial decomposition during winter, there is a loss of organic carbon but also a reduction in the SO2 output as N, Cl, and S are reduced by delaying harvest [77]. Cool season grasses, typical of northern climates, senesce earlier than warm season grasses like switchgrass and Miscanthus. This early senescence facilitates earlier harvests, but cool season grasses vary more widely in composition and tend to have greater ash content [78]. In a recent study on the potential for mixed rangeland grasses as fermentation feedstocks [79], biomass yield was the primary determinant on theoretical ethanol yield while both harvest season and geographic location affected overall biomass yield.

Harvesting operation and equipment are important sources of variation of feedstock properties. Hand harvesting willow woodchips leads to lower ash content than commercial harvest operations [69]. Variation in hand-collected ash and moisture data was small relative to reported data for large-scale harvests of herbaceous crops and agriculture residues which were primarily affected by geographic location and cultivar. Combined hand and commercial harvesting should be performed to assess the quantity of entrained soil collected by commercial harvest systems [69]. Differences in total ash content for corn stover harvested in Kansas due to differences in harvesting equipment were between 11.5 and 28.2 % [80].

Impact of Physical and Compositional Variability on Biochemical and Thermochemical Conversions

As outlined above, many factors contribute to biomass compositional variability, and this variation can have a significant impact on the conversion of biomass to value-added products. Ideally, these problems could be mitigated through selection of pretreatments, conversion processes, or by blending different types of biomass to diminish detrimental effects, e.g., reduce the effective ash content of herbaceous materials by blending them with woody biomass. The following section covers the basic principles behind the four major conversion processes: fermentation, hydrothermal liquefaction, pyrolysis, and direct combustion with respect to how biomass variability affects each conversion process.

Ethanol Production Through Fermentation

The production of ethanol from lignocellulosic biomass occurs through two major steps: deconstruction of the cellulose and hemicellulose to fermentable sugars and fermentation of these sugars to ethanol. This conversion process has been evaluated in many informative reviews [3, 41, 8185] which vary from focusing on pretreatment and enzymatic hydrolysis of lignocellulosic materials [41], to optimization of cellulase enzyme, microorganisms, fermentation processes for improving sugar conversion to ethanol [82], and evaluation of economic aspects and future outlook for fuel ethanol production [85, 86].

Physical and chemical characteristics of biomass can affect ethanol yield and process economics. The production of ethanol through microbial fermentation is typically much more dependent on biomass carbohydrate content and less susceptible to ash content. Therefore, fermentation is particularly well suited to herbaceous crops that typically have higher ash contents [87]. However, alkali metal content in soil collected while harvesting biomass can adversely affect the typical acid pretreatment and enzymatic hydrolysis, which releases the fermentable sugars. Soil content of the harvested biomass can directly increase the acid neutralization capacity, and therefore lower the xylan digestibility, of corn stover upon dilute acid pretreatment [34]. Adjusting total carbohydrate content by 1 % of total dry matter can change the minimum ethanol selling price (MESP) by $0.018/gal [86].

One aspect of biomass variation that could be utilized in ethanol production is the difference between anatomical fractions for a plant like corn stover. Differences in structural carbohydrates with anatomical fraction in corn stover have a significant effect on glucose yield. Glucose concentration after hydrolysis was three times greater in the cobs, leaves, and husks than the stalks [88]. Therefore, anatomical fraction and selective fermentation of the most valuable components could increase process efficiency if a good alternative can be found for the stalks.

Hydrothermal Liquefaction

Hydrothermal treatments involve the reaction of biomass in an aqueous media for the production of either liquids or, in some cases, gases. These reactions are performed over a wide range of temperatures (200–600 °C) and are done at high pressures (5–40 MPa) to keep the water in the liquid or supercritical phase. Reactions from 200–350 °C are typical for liquid products while temperatures above 400 °C are suitable for gaseous products. Sub and supercritical water technologies span a wide range of temperatures, feedstocks (model compounds as well as biomass), and final products including both liquid bio-oils and gases [18]. Hydrothermal treatments can target liquid products from a variety of feedstocks [17, 35], including products normally thought of as waste, such as lignin [89].

Liquid reaction media is well suited for utilizing biphasic systems to improve process separations. Luterbacher et al. achieved sugar yields of 65 % from woody biomass and 55 % from switchgrass using a biphasic water/CO2 system with ∼1 cm particles and 40 wt% solids [90]. The targeted production of sugars from biomass instead of oils could facilitate the production of high-value chemicals, like renewable plastics, instead of fuels [91]. Production of bio-oils, instead of sugars, through HTL typically gives lower yields than pyrolysis. However, HTL bio-oils tend to have higher quality and save energy because the feedstocks do not require drying prior to conversion [35]. In addition, HTL bio-oils typically have a lower oxygen content than fast pyrolysis oils, which gives them their higher quality, while still having a greater oxygen content than crude oil [18].

As a pretreatment process, mild hydrothermal treatment reduces ash content when used in combination with a sodium citrate chelating agent [32]. This could have potential benefits when processing biomass for further conversion processes that require low ash content. However, the additional energy required to remove water from the chelating process reduces the economic viability of this process for pyrolysis or gasification conversion. Utilizing hydrothermal liquefaction as a conversion process provides at least two advantages: the aqueous reaction media allows for a wide variety of feedstocks, regardless of initial moisture content (even marine biomass with up to 90 % water) and reactions are fairly independent of particle size given the high heat transfer rates in hydrothermal media [17]. These facts make HTL well suited for a diverse array of feedstocks.

Pyrolysis

Pyrolysis is a thermochemical treatment that increases biomass energy density by removing oxygen through water and volatiles while producing oils that can be upgraded to fuel. Pyrolysis is typically performed at temperatures of 400–600 °C [92] and often includes a catalyst [93]. Biomass pyrolysis processes have been extensively reviewed [19, 20, 9398].

Pyrolysis processes are particularly well suited for low moisture content woody materials with minimal ash and higher lignin content. For example, lignin content in woody biomass can increase the average molecular weight of pyrolysis oil by 100 Da as the lignin content increases from 5 to 15 % [36]. Raw herbaceous materials are less favorable for pyrolysis conversion because they have lower lignin content compared to wood and much higher ash content. Pyrolysis oil yield decreases by 1–5 % for every 1 % increase in ash [36]. In addition to decreasing oil yields, alkali metals and other inorganics, which are common in fertilizers used on herbaceous crops, can have damaging effects on reactors and reduce catalyst lifetimes [99]. However, the effect of ash on overall pyrolysis and upgrading performance is not fully clear. The effects of ash content ranging from 0.7 to 1.6 % on several feedstocks including pines, poplars, switchgrass, and corn stover in an integrated fast pyrolysis and oil hydrotreating upgrading process was found to be statistically insignificant [100].

Combustion and Co-Firing

Fire is ingrained in human civilization and has been used for everything from managing agricultural lands to the production of energy for tens of thousands of years and is still highly used in developing countries [101]. In modern developed countries, non-renewable fossil fuels such as oil, coal, and natural gas are the prime energy sources; however, these sources could be depleted within the next 40–50 years [102]. To reduce the depletion of non-renewable sources and reduce environmental impact, there is movement towards the combustion of renewable biomass and other waste products (like paper and plastics). Demirbas has produced several reviews on the combustion of biomass as a renewable energy source [22, 30, 102, 103]. Additionally, Tumuluru et al. has extensively reviewed torrefaction for transforming raw biomass into a feedstock that is suitable for co-firing applications [14, 104, 105].

The largest problem associated with the combustion of biomass (as well as waste products) is that biomass has a very low heating value compared to non-renewable fossil fuels, and the increased inorganic species in the biomass can cause boiler fouling and reduce combustion efficiencies [21, 106]. However, while biomass can increase reactor fouling, it also reduces harmful emissions compared to coal [107]. An additional benefit is that energy produced through biomass combustion can be incorporated directly into the current energy grid without requiring infrastructure changes.

Minimizing the Impact of Biomass Variability on Conversion Processes

This article has discussed inherent and introduced biomass variability as well as the downstream effects on the current conversion processes. Due to the loss in efficiency and profit associated with biomass variability, it is important to develop methods that could serve to mitigate these harmful effects and increase conversion efficiency. These methods will likely involve chemical, physical, or thermal pretreatments combined with the development of a uniform format supply system.

Chemical, Physical, and Thermal Pretreatments Methods

Chemical pretreatments address the issue of biomass variability by providing a potential route for the fractionation of biomass into process streams of constituent components, like cellulosic material and lignin, as well as a way to remove ash. Specific chemical pretreatments include steam, liquid water, acids, bases, ionic liquids [108], organosolv [109], sulfite pretreatment (SPORL) [110, 111], and ammonia fiber explosion (AFEX) [112]. Chelating agents like sodium citrate effectively remove ash from corn stover under mild hydrothermal pretreatment [32]. These chemical pretreatments can be strongly influenced by processing parameters. For instance, particle size and anatomical composition alter the effectiveness of AFEX for corn stover with the larger cobs and stalks being more recalcitrant than the leaves and husk [113]. A greater fundamental understanding of these various pretreatment technologies will enhance their use for particular conversion technologies.

Densification technologies, such as briquetting and pelletization, assure uniformity of physical properties, while having minimal impact on chemical composition [114, 115]. Densification also enables low-cost transportation, increases shelf-life for outdoor storage, and improves feeding and handling performance. Dry and wet thermal treatments, such as torrefaction, mild hydrothermal carbonization, and steam explosion can also reduce hygroscopicity, increase grindability and shelf-life, and reduce volatiles and extractives content, including organic acids [20, 104, 105, 114, 116].

The Uniform-Format Supply System

Currently, there are several options to lessen the challenges associated with variation of key biomass attributes, such as constituent ash, structural carbohydrates, and moisture content. These options include selecting regionally adapted cultivars,[117] and tailoring harvest times/techniques for desired outcomes. As mentioned above, the effects of biomass variability can also be actively addressed using chemical, thermal, or biological preprocessing steps to transform raw biomass into commodity feedstocks with uniform physical properties [118]. A uniform-format supply system that enables different types and fractions of biomass to be exchanged as commodities would facilitate formulating and blending to achieve quality specifications [116, 119]. Preprocessing steps that separate, formulate, and format feedstocks could be performed at strategically distributed facilities (depots), and then densified commodities can be shipped to central biorefineries or other end-use locations. An additional advantage of this model, which follows the current world-wide grain commodity system, is that it reduces risks associated with feedstock supply, including fluctuations due to seasonal changes, disease, and natural disasters [118, 120, 121].

Future research should seek to balance efforts which develop low-cost feedstock preprocessing systems that prepare raw biomass for local conversion methods with more advanced pretreatments that transform materials into commodities that can be exchanged in global biofuels and bio-based products markets. For instance, herbaceous materials (such as corn stover) have high ash content (>5 %) and more fermentable sugars, so enzymatic hydrolysis and fermentation are natural conversion pathways. In regions where these plants grow in high densities, such as the Midwest and Southeast, minimal preprocessing is adequate to prepare the biomass for conversion. Similarly, short-rotation softwoods and hardwoods can be grown in high densities in the Southeast and Northwest and also show promise in the Midwest and Northeast. These feedstocks can be prepared for fast pyrolysis or hydrothermal liquefaction with little preprocessing because they have inherent low ash content (<0.5 %). In regions where diverse biomass types are cultivated or where there is lower feedstock production, more advanced preprocessing operations, especially densification, are needed so that the biomass can be collected into commodity markets. Placing greater focus on the production of chemicals and other high-value products, such as vanillin and other aromatic aldehydes from waste lignin, would also serve to increase the cost competitiveness of bio-based industries, including biofuels. In many cases, the same processes that enable high value co-products could also reduce feedstock variability by separating feed streams according to chemical composition.

Conclusions

Innate and introduced variability between different biomass resources impedes the utilization of biomass as a carbon neutral and domestic source for fuels and chemicals. Characteristics such as moisture content, carbohydrate, lignin, ash compositions, bulk density, and particle size/shape distributions impact conversion processes like fermentation, hydrothermal liquefaction, pyrolysis, and co-firing. Fermentation is well suited to handle high ash herbaceous materials with greater structural sugars content while processes like pyrolysis are well suited to utilize low ash and high lignin woody feedstocks. Optimizing biomass through selection of ideal cultivars, harvest time (spring vs. fall), and selective harvest methods will help reduce biomass variability and the overall load on the processing facilities. For instance, delaying biomass harvest until spring will reduce ash and moisture content, resulting in improved yields and efficiencies in thermochemical conversion processes and lessening slagging when co-firing biomass and coal. Mechanical, thermal, and chemical pretreatments, followed by densification, at local preprocessing supply depots may also be used to take advantage of biomass variability by separating out fractions that are naturally well suited to produce high-value products while transforming raw biomass feed streams into uniform-format commodities.