Illinois Data Bank

Data from Impact of Fractionation Process on the Technical and Economic Viability of Corn Dry Grind Ethanol Process

Use of corn fractionation techniques in dry grind process increases the number of coproducts, enhances their quality and value, generates feedstock for cellulosic ethanol production and potentially increases profitability of the dry grind process. The aim of this study is to develop process simulation models for eight different wet and dry corn fractionation techniques recovering germ, pericarp fiber and/or endosperm fiber, and evaluate their techno-economic feasibility at the commercial scale. Ethanol yields for plants processing 1113.11 MT corn/day were 37.2 to 40 million gal for wet fractionation and 37.3 to 31.3 million gal for dry fractionation, compared to 40.2 million gal for conventional dry grind process. Capital costs were higher for wet fractionation processes ($92.85 to $97.38 million) in comparison to conventional ($83.95 million) and dry fractionation ($83.35 to $84.91 million) processes. Due to high value of coproducts, ethanol production costs in most fractionation processes ($1.29 to $1.35/gal) were lower than conventional ($1.36/gal) process. Internal rate of return for most of the wet (6.88 to 8.58%) and dry fractionation (6.45 to 7.04%) processes was higher than the conventional (6.39%) process. Wet fractionation process designed for germ and pericarp fiber recovery was most profitable among the processes.

Life Sciences
Conversion;Feedstock Bioprocessing;Modeling
CC BY
U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)-Grant:DE-SC0018420
Vijay Singh
204 times
Version DOI Comment Publication Date
1 10.13012/B2IDB-1557661_V1 2025-09-18

2.03 KB File
281 Bytes File
176 Bytes File
201 Bytes File
353 Bytes File
550 Bytes File
7.98 KB File
831 Bytes File
663 Bytes File
644 Bytes File
307 Bytes File

Contact the Research Data Service for help interpreting this log.

Research Data Service Illinois Data Bank
Access and Use Policies Web Privacy Notice Contact Us