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Ethyl alcohol (ethanol) can be produced by the fermentation of sugars derived from agricultural products such as sugarcane and com. Some countries without large petroleum and natural gas reserves—such as Brazil—have found it profitable to convert a portion of their agricultural output to ethanol for fuel or for use as a feedstock in the synthesis of other chemicals.
In one such process, a portion of the starch in com is converted to ethanol in two consecutive reactions. In a saccharification reaction, starch decomposes in the presence of certain enzymes (biological catalysts) to form an aqueous mash containing maltose (C12H22O11, a sugar) and several other decomposition products. The mash is cooled and combined with additional water and a yeast culture in a batch fermentation tank (fermentor). In the fermentation reaction (actually a complex series of reactions), the yeast culture grows and in the process converts maltose to ethanol and carbon dioxide:
The fermentor is a 550,000 gallon tank filled to 90% of its capacity with a suspension of mash and yeast in water. The mass of the yeast is negligible compared to the total mass of the tank contents. Thermal energy is released by the exothermic conversion of maltose to ethanol. In an adiabatic operating stage, the temperature of the tank contents increases from an initial value of 85°F to 95°F. and in a second stage the temperature is kept at 95°F by a reactor cooling system. The final reaction mixture contains carbon dioxide dissolved in a slurry containing 7.1 wt% ethanol, 6.9 wt% soluble and suspended solids, and the balance water. The mixture is pumped to a flash evaporator in w hich CO2is vaporized, and the ethanol product is then separated from the remaining mixture components in a series of distillation and stripping operations. Data
• One bushel (56 Ibm) of com yields 25 gallons of mash fed to the fermentor, which in turn yields 2.6 gallons of ethanol. Roughly 101 bushels of com is harvested from an acre of land.
- A batch fermentation cycle (charging the fermentation tank, running the reaction, discharging the tank, and preparing the tank to receive the next load) takes eight hours. The process operates 24 hours per day, 330 days per year.
- The specific gravity of the fermentation reaction mixture is approximately constant at 1.05. The average heat capacity of the mixture is 0.95 Btu/(Ibm·°F). The standard heat of combustion of maltose to form CO 2(g) and
Calculate the standard heat of the maltose conversion reaction,
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