4/6/2016
We will begin momentarily at 2pm ET
Slides available now! Recordings will be available to ACS members after one week.
www.acs.org/acswebinars Contact ACS Webinars ® at
[email protected] 1
Have Questions?
“Why am I muted?” Don’t worry. Everyone is muted except the presenter and host. Thank you and enjoy the show.
Type them into questions box! Contact ACS Webinars ® at
[email protected] 2
1
4/6/2016
Have you discovered the missing element?
http://bit.ly/ACSjoin Find the many benefits of ACS membership! 3
Benefits of ACS Membership Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN) The preeminent weekly news source.
NEW! Free Access to ACS Presentations on Demand® ACS Member only access to over 1,000 presentation recordings from recent ACS meetings and select events.
NEW! ACS Career Navigator Your source for leadership development, professional education, career services, and much more.
http://bit.ly/ACSjoin
4
2
4/6/2016
Let’s get Social…post, tweet, and link to ACS Webinars during today’s broadcast!
facebook.com/acswebinars
@acswebinars
Search for “acswebinars” and connect!
5
How has ACS Webinars benefited you?
®
“A perfect webinar! Dee Strand was fantastic. The Chemistry of Hello: Lithium Ion Batteries was of the clearest and most educational per unit time technical presentations that I have heard in my more than 25 years as a professional scientist.”
Walter Cicha, Ph.D., Industrial Technology Advisor, Industrial Research Assistance Program, National Research Council of Canada
Be a featured fan on an upcoming webinar! Write to us @
[email protected] 6
3
4/6/2016
facebook.com/acswebinars @acswebinars youtube.com/acswebinars
Search for “acswebinars” and connect! 7
Learn from the best and brightest minds in chemistry! Hundreds of webinars presented by subject matter experts in the chemical enterprise. Recordings are available to current ACS members one week after the Live broadcast date. www.acs.org/acswebinars ®
Broadcasts of ACS Webinars continue to be available to the general public LIVE every Thursday at 2pm ET!
www.acs.org/acswebinars
8
4
4/6/2016
®
Upcoming ACS Webinars www.acs.org/acswebinars Thursday, April 14, 2016
Creating a Stand Out Professional Development Plan Dorie Clark, Author and Marketing Strategy Consultant, Clark Strategic Communications, Inc. John Mihalick, Strategic Accounts Manager, ACS Professional Advancement
Thursday, April 21, 2016
Tackling Toxics: The Chemical Class Approach towards Healthier Products and Materials Arlene Blum, Executive Director, Green Science Policy Institute Graham Peaslee, Professor of Chemistry, Hope College
Contact ACS Webinars ® at
[email protected] 9
2016 Material Science Series http://bit.ly/2016MaterialScienceSeries
Ever since the Model-T first rolled off the production line in 1908, the world of transportation has never been the same. Join us as we examine the science behind innovations that will drive the world for the next 100 years.
* If you are attending today, you are already signed for all the webinars in the “Chemistry of Go” mini-series so just save the dates of May 5th and June 2nd for the upcoming webinars.
The 2016 Material Science Series is co-produced with ACS Industry Member Programs and C&EN
10
5
4/6/2016
2016 Material Science Series
“Chemistry of Go: Innovations in Alternative Fuels”
Jennifer Holmgren
Mark Jones
Chief Executive Officer, LanzaTech
Executive External Strategy and Communications Fellow, Dow Chemical
Slides available now! Recordings will be available to ACS members after one week
www.acs.org/acswebinars The 2016 Material Science Series is co-produced with ACS Industry Member Programs and C&EN
11
“The Chemistry of Go: Innovations in Alternative Fuels” Jennifer Holmgren, CEO, LanzaTech 2015 LanzaTech. All rights reserved.
2015 LanzaTech. All rights reserved.
12
6
4/6/2016
Easter Parade New York City 1900
13
Easter Parade New York City 1913
14
7
4/6/2016
What do we need to “Go”? Movement requires energy. Fuels carry energy.
What makes a good fuel? Energy-dense Inexpensive Easy to handle
15
Audience Survey Question ANSWER THE QUESTION ON BLUE SCREEN IN ONE MOMENT
What percentage of cars in 1900 were electric?
• Less than a quarter • About a quarter • Between a quarter and a half • More than half • About three-fourths
16
8
4/6/2016
Audience Survey Question ANSWER THE QUESTION ON BLUE SCREEN IN ONE MOMENT
What percentage of cars in 1900 were electric?
• Less than a quarter • About a quarter • Between a quarter and a half (37%) • More than half • About three-fourths
17
Evolution of Go…Steam, Electricity and Coal
18
9
4/6/2016
And then came Petroleum…
• Reliable • Practical • Cheap • Efficient • Easier to Control • Less likely to explode
19
Refinery Output
Refinery Products
Refinery Gasoline/Cars
Jet Fuel/Airplanes
Diesel Trucks/ Construction Equipment
Crude Oil
Asphalt
Bunker Fuel (Ships)
Lube Oils
20
10
4/6/2016
Refinery Overview • Crude oil is a complex mixture of various lengths and shapes of carbon and hydrogen molecules, with different chemical properties. In addition, crude oil contains significant levels of heteroatoms such as S, N which must be removed before burning fuels. • A typical US refinery processes 100,000 – 250,000 barrels (~ 4 – 10 million gallons) of crude oil per day. • Processing unit operations vary by refinery and depend on crude oil used as input as well as desired product slate.
21
Crude Oil •
•
Crude oil varies in both density and sulfur content depending on its origin around the world. This results in differences in cost for purchasing the oil and required technology to refine it into products.
H H H H Class – Paraffin Name – Butane
H–C–C–C–C–H H H H H H H H H H H H H
Class – Aromatic Name – Octane
H–C–C–C–C–C–C–C–C–H H H H H H H H H H H
Class – Aromatic Name – Benzene
C
H C
C C
C H C
H Class – Cyclo-paraffin Name – Cyclohexane
H H H C H C H C H H
H H C H C H C H H 22
11
4/6/2016
Chemical Conversion: Adding Value • Cracking – Converts heavy gas oils and residual to higher value gasoline and diesel components – Cracking can be thermal (Coker) or catalytic (Fluidized Catalytic Cracker)
• Alkylation ─ Converts shorter-chain molecules to longer-chain molecules ─ Typically C3/C4 molecules upgraded to gasoline components
• Upgrading ─ Improvement of low-octane fuels to high-octane fuels (Reformer) ─ Dehydrogenation reactions, converting linear hydrocarbons to branched and cyclic hydrocarbons
23
Boiling Point Separation •
Smaller hydrocarbons are gaseous with low boiling points
•
Longer chains are liquids, then waxes and finally solids
24
12
4/6/2016
Generic Refining Flowscheme LPG
Hydrogen
Naphtha Hydrotreating
Gasoline Isomerization
Mid-Distillate Hydrotreating
Crude Distillation
Catalytic Reforming
Gasoline, Aromatics
Hydrocracking
Jet Diesel
Jet, Diesel LPG
Crude
Alkylation FCC
Gasoline Gasoline Cycle Oil to Hydrotreating or Hydrocracking
Vacuum Distillation Coking
Petroleum Coke
Asphalt
25
Milestones
Bao Steel China
Shougang China
WBT Taiwan
Sekisui Japan
1Q2011
3Q2011
1Q2013
4Q2103
JV registered
4Q2011
4Q2011
4Q2012
BEP
2Q2011
1Q2012
2Q2013
Audience Survey Question
Agreements executed
ANSWER THE QUESTION ON BLUE SCREEN IN ONE MOMENT
1Q2014
How are the hydrocarbons produced 4Q2013 at the top of4Q2014 the 1Q2012 4Q2012 Start Up column, different 1Q2012from those 4Q2012produced 1Q2014 1Q2015 lower down? Mechanical completion
Fixes 10 day run
3Q2012
1Q2014
1Q2015
• They have longer chains and lower boiling points Run 10 4Q2012
Run 3 1Q2013
Run 1 2Q2014
4Q2015 • They have shorter chains and lower boiling points
Integrated operation
• They have longer chains and higher boiling points • They have shorter chains and higher boiling points
26
13
4/6/2016
Audience Survey Question ANSWER THE QUESTION ON BLUE SCREEN IN ONE MOMENT
How are the hydrocarbons produced at the top of the column, different from those produced lower down? • They have longer chains and lower boiling points • They have shorter chains and lower boiling points • They have longer chains and higher boiling points • They have shorter chains and higher boiling points * The longer the chain the higher the boiling temperature.
27
Evolution of “Go” Vehicles have changed a lot. Their fuel? Not so much
Cars have been tied to gasoline for most of their history, but fuel tech keeps evolving… Now more than ever, we need to look at alternative solutions and technologies to make us “GO”
28
14
4/6/2016
The Status Quo is not an Option
14% of Global CO2 Emissions come from transportation fuels
29
A Carbon Smart World Remaining: 1000 GtCO2 1870-2011: 1900 GtCO2
65% of 2°carbon budget: USED
Must stay in the ground
30
15
4/6/2016
St. Louis Post Dispatch October 17, 2014
Advanced Biofuels Taking Off
POET-DSM September 3, 2014
Biofuels Digest October 6, 2014
Biofuels Digest October 16, 2014
National Geographic October 17, 2014
Getting a New Process to Scale Continuous improvement at scale
Discovery
Applied R&D
Ease of funding
Adapt and adopt from others Engineering Development Diffusion Pilot and Demonstration First Commercial
Evolution 32
16
4/6/2016
RTP™ History 2006-Present Renewable Liquid Fuels: Key alliances & Project execution
1998-2005 1989-1998 Commercialization & Scale-up US - $20+M sale for Chemicals
Petroleum Business Development & sale for US$100 MM
1984: Foundation
* Since 1996, Ensyn has returned to shareholders 2x the amount it has raised in equity funding 33
Commercial Isobutanol/Ethanol Plant in Luverne, MN Agri-Energy
Commissioning timeline Date
Statistics First commercial scale renewable isobutanol plant in the world
Event
September 2010
Purchased Luverne plant
May-Sep. 2012
Encountered unexpected levels of contamination
Sep.-May 2013
Revamped plant and procedures to address contamination issues
May – Sep. 2013
Tested new systems and procedures
Oct.– April 2014
Encountered operability issues related to water recycling and solids handling
May 2014 – Present
Running in side-by-side mode to better handle water and solids. Improves operability of plant, and simplifies IBA production. WORKS WELL
Purchased in 2010 & 100% owned by Gevo
Made minor system and hardware upgrades
World-scale chemicals plant Luverne Facility
Typical Specialty Chemical Plant
Feedstock
Carbohydrates-based
Petroleum-based
Expected Production
100 MM lbs per year of Isobutanol/Ethanol 100 MM lbs per of year of animal feed
50-175 MM lbs per year(1)
(1) Derived from a sample of 10 operating specialty chemical plants producing chemicals such as Methyl Amines, Dimethyl Formamide, EPVC, Phenol Acetone, Formaldehyde, Polyamides and Methanol © 2014 Gevo, Inc. | 34 Source: International Process Plants, EIA
34
17
4/6/2016
Hydro-Processed Esters and Fatty Acids (HEFA) and Green Diesel +
CO2
HO
CH3
Free Fatty Acid MW=200-300
O O
H2 CH3
HC O O
H3C
CH3
OO
CH3 Triglyceride MW=700-900
O
CO2
H2O +
H2O
H3C
CH3 CH3
H3C
H3C
CH3
CH2 +
H3C
CH3
H3C Straight Chain Paraffins
Catalyst
Natural oils contain oxygen, have high molecular weight. Catalyst
First reaction removes oxygen – product is diesel range waxy paraffins
H2 CH3 CH
3
H3C
Second reaction “cracks” diesel paraffins to smaller, highly branched molecules
CH3 CH3
CH3 H3C
+ H3C Synthetic Paraffinic Kerosene
Feedstock flexible,
CH3CH3
+
CH3
H3C
but with consistent product properties 35
Source: Dr. James Kinder, Boeing
Global green diesel & HEFA production Phillips 13 M Gallons USA
Neste Oil 240 M Gallons Netherlands Blue Sun 2 M Gallons USA
Preem 126 M Gallons Finland
UPM 38 M Gallons Finland
Neste Oil 114 M Gallons Finland Eni 100 M Gallons Italy
AltAir 30 M Gallons CA (Est. 2015)
Sinopec 6 M Gallons China
SG Preston 120 M Gallons OH (Est. 2017)
Diamond REG Green Diesel 75 M Gallons 137 M Gallons LA LA
Petrixo 310 M Gallons Fujairah, U.A.E. (Est. TBD)
BP 29 M Gallons Brisbane, Aus.
Neste Oil 240 M Gallons Singapore
Petrobras 69 M Gallons Brazil
Supply available to address significant aviation markets Copyright © 2014 Boeing. All rights reserved.
Source: Dr. James Kinder, Boeing
Filename
36
18
4/6/2016
The Boeing Company
ASTM Fuel Approval Process- ASTM D4054 Test Program
OEM Internal Review
Specification Change
OEM Internal Review
Reject or Additional Data as Required
Fuel Specification Properties
ASTM Review & Ballot
Fit-for-Purpose Properties
Component or Rig Tests
Research Report
Reject or Additional Data as Required
FAA Review Engine Endurance Test
OEM Approval Incorporate into Fuel Specification with FAA Consensus
ASTM Specification
In depth, multiparty review Source: Dr. James Kinder, Boeing
37
BOEING PROPRIETARY
Great Progress on Certification for Flight Certification “Less than a decade ago, the prospect of flying commercial aircraft on sustainable aviation fuels (SAF) seemed unrealistic due to the associated technical and safety challenges, the developments have been impressive!” IATA Roadmap
Type
ASTM approval
When
Fischer Tropsch (FT) (or BtL)
Max 50% blend
2009
Hydrotreated Esters and Fatty Acids (HEFA)
Max 50% blend
2011
Renewable Synthesized Iso-Paraffinic (SIP)
Max 10% blend
2014
Butanol to Jet Fuel (ATJ)
Max 30% blend
2016
Pipeline: Green Diesel, Ethanol to Jet (EtJ), pyrolysis and catalytic cracking (Hydroprocessed Depolymerized Cellulosic Jet), catalytic hydrothermolysis and catalytic conversion of sugars.
38
19
4/6/2016
Carbon Recycling: The LanzaTech Process
Proprietary Microbe
Gas fermentation technology converts Crich gases to fuels and chemicals
Gas Feed Stream
Gas Reception Compression Fermentation
Recovery
Product Tank
Performance milestones achieved and exceeded for >1000 hours
39
ArcelorMittal, Gent Ground Works Started October 2015 Gas Testing Station Produces Ethanol January 2016
Connection to Steel Mill Gas Lines March 2016
40
20
4/6/2016
Embrace the Circular Economy: Recycle Everything
CCU
“CCS”
Recycle
Make
41
All Solutions Must Succeed… Even Those We Don’t Yet Know.
42
21
4/6/2016
2016 Material Science Series
“Chemistry of Go: Innovations in Alternative Fuels”
Jennifer Holmgren
Mark Jones
Chief Executive Officer, LanzaTech
Executive External Strategy and Communications Fellow, Dow Chemical
Slides available now! Recordings will be available to ACS members after one week
www.acs.org/acswebinars The 2016 Material Science Series is co-produced with ACS Industry Member Programs and C&EN
43
2016 Material Science Series http://bit.ly/2016MaterialScienceSeries
Ever since the Model-T first rolled off the production line in 1908, the world of transportation has never been the same. Join us as we examine the science behind the innovations that will drive the world for the next 100 years.
* If you are attending today, you are already signed for all the webinars in the “Chemistry of Go” mini-series so just save the dates of May 5th and June 2nd for the upcoming webinars.
The 2016 Material Science Series is co-produced with ACS Industry Member Programs and C&EN
44
22
4/6/2016
®
Upcoming ACS Webinars www.acs.org/acswebinars Thursday, April 14, 2016
Creating a Stand Out Professional Development Plan Dorie Clark, Author and Marketing Strategy Consultant, Clark Strategic Communications, Inc. John Mihalick, Strategic Accounts Manager, ACS Professional Advancement
Thursday, April 21, 2016
Tackling Toxics: The Chemical Class Approach towards Healthier Products and Materials Arlene Blum, Executive Director, Green Science Policy Institute Graham Peaslee, Professor of Chemistry, Hope College
Contact ACS Webinars ® at
[email protected] 45
2016 Material Science Series
“Chemistry of Go: Innovations in Alternative Fuels”
Jennifer Holmgren
Mark Jones
Chief Executive Officer, LanzaTech
Executive External Strategy and Communications Fellow, Dow Chemical
Slides available now! Recordings will be available to ACS members after one week
www.acs.org/acswebinars The 2016 Material Science Series is co-produced with ACS Industry Member Programs and C&EN
46
23
4/6/2016
How has ACS Webinars benefited you?
®
“A perfect webinar! Dee Strand was fantastic. The Chemistry of Hello: Lithium Ion Batteries was of the clearest and most educational per unit time technical presentations that I have heard in my more than 25 years as a professional scientist.”
Walter Cicha, Ph.D., Industrial Technology Advisor, Industrial Research Assistance Program, National Research Council of Canada
Be a featured fan on an upcoming webinar! Write to us @
[email protected] 47
facebook.com/acswebinars @acswebinars youtube.com/acswebinars
Search for “acswebinars” and connect! 48
24
4/6/2016
Benefits of ACS Membership Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN) The preeminent weekly news source.
NEW! Free Access to ACS Presentations on Demand® ACS Member only access to over 1,000 presentation recordings from recent ACS meetings and select events.
NEW! ACS Career Navigator Your source for leadership development, professional education, career services, and much more.
http://bit.ly/ACSjoin
49
®
ACS Webinars does not endorse any products or services. The views expressed in this presentation are those of the presenter and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the American Chemical Society.
Contact ACS Webinars ® at
[email protected] 50
25
4/6/2016
®
Upcoming ACS Webinars www.acs.org/acswebinars Thursday, April 14, 2016
Creating a Stand Out Professional Development Plan Dorie Clark, Author and Marketing Strategy Consultant, Clark Strategic Communications, Inc. John Mihalick, Strategic Accounts Manager, ACS Professional Advancement
Thursday, April 21, 2016
Tackling Toxics: The Chemical Class Approach towards Healthier Products and Materials Arlene Blum, Executive Director, Green Science Policy Institute Graham Peaslee, Professor of Chemistry, Hope College
Contact ACS Webinars ® at
[email protected] 51
26