ACE-Start-Up-070114

Top left to right: Charlie Voss, Quad County Corn Processors (QCCP) Production Manager; Brad Yearous, QCCP Production Supervisor; Travis Brotherson, QCCP Plant Engineer, Research & Development, ACE Inventor; Rex Rimmer, QCCP Project Manager and Maintenance Manager; Josh Droegmiller, Systems Administration/ IT. Bottom left to right: Justin Ruble, QCCP Water Manager; Joe Williams, QCCP Lab Manager; Delayne Johnson, QCCP CEO.

A farmer-owned facility in northwest Iowa has produced the first gallons of “cellulosic” ethanol in the state and, perhaps, the world that’s made from the fiber of a corn kernel.

The Quad County Corn Processors plant in Galva has been making ethanol from the starch in kernels of corn for more than a decade, but it now has begun making ethanol from the fiber of the corn kernels as well. Delayne Johnson, the plant’s CEO, says the new technology has been inserted halfway through the process of making ethanol.

“What we are doing is taking the corn starch ethanol out and then we are fermenting the fiber and the remaining portion that’s left to create cellulosic ethanol out of the corn kernel fiber,” Johnson says.

That fiber is what gives the kernel its “hardness”, according to Johnson.

“And the cellulose that’s in that corn kernel is able to produce an extra six percent ethanol out of a bushel of corn compared to what we were doing when we didn’t convert the corn kernel fiber,” Johnson says.

While other plants are being designed and constructed to make cellulosic ethanol out of corn stalks, the facility in Galva is able to use the corn kernels that are already being delivered there.

“It’s the most simplistic way to make cellulosic ethanol out of any of them out there because the product is already here and the transportation and logistics of any cellulosic component is usually the most difficult,” Johnson says.

Nine million dollars of extra equipment has been added to the Quad County Corn Processors plant to start fermenting the fiber from corn kernels. The first gallons of distilled cellulosic ethanol were produced on July 1. Johnson expects the plant to make two million gallons of cellulosic ethanol annually.

“We’re hoping to license this technology to other plants be able to be more efficient at their facilities as well,” Johnson says. “If every plant that’s currently processing corn in the United States would adopt the technology, it would add one billion gallons of cellulosic ethanol to our fuel stream here in the United States without processing any more corn.”

Ethanol, corn oil and dried distillers grain continue to be the byproducts of processing corn kernels at the plant, however Johnson says there’s triple the amount of corn oil from this new technology, plus the dried distillers grain contains less fiber and more protein, making it more attractive to livestock producers. A group of investors formed Quad County Corn Processors 14 years ago and the facility began producing ethanol 12 years ago.