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Elias Martinez-Hernandez

Bio: Elias Martinez-Hernandez is an academic researcher from Mexican Institute of Petroleum. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biorefinery & Bioenergy. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 46 publications receiving 968 citations. Previous affiliations of Elias Martinez-Hernandez include University of Surrey & University of Oxford.
Topics: Biorefinery, Bioenergy, Biomass, Biofuel, Bagasse

Papers published on a yearly basis

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated optimum bio-based systems, such as bioenergy and biorefinery, and their prospects in sustainable development in Malaysia, while analyzing comparable cases globally.
Abstract: Malaysia has a plethora of biomass that can be utilized in a sustainable manner to produce bio-products for circular green economy. At the 15th Conference of Parties in Copenhagen, Malaysia stated to voluntarily reduce its emissions intensity of gross domestic product by upto 40% by 2020 from 2005 level. Natural resources e.g. forestry and agricultural resources will attribute in achieving these goals. This paper investigates optimum bio-based systems, such as bioenergy and biorefinery, and their prospects in sustainable development in Malaysia, while analyzing comparable cases globally. Palm oil industry will continue to play a major role in deriving products and contributing to gross national income in Malaysia. Based on the current processing capacity, one tonne of crude palm oil (CPO) production is associated with nine tonnes of biomass generation. Local businesses tend to focus on products with low-risk that enjoy subsidies, e.g. Feed-in-Tariff, such as bioenergy, biogas, etc. CPO biomass is utilized to produce biogas, pellets, dried long fibre and bio-fertilizer and recycle water. It is envisaged that co-production of bio-based products, food and pharmaceutical ingredients, fine, specialty and platform chemicals, polymers, alongside biofuel and bioenergy from biomass is possible to achieve overall sustainability by the replacement of fossil resources. Inception of process integration gives prominent innovative biorefinery configurations, an example demonstrated recently, via extraction of recyclable, metal, high value chemical (levulinic acid), fuel, electricity and bio-fertilizer from municipal solid waste or urban waste. Levulinic acid yield by only 5 weight% of waste feedstock gives 1.5 fold increase in profitability and eliminates the need for subsidies such as gate fees paid by local authority to waste processor. Unsustainable practices include consumable food wastage, end-of-pipe cleaning and linear economy that must be replaced by sustainable production and consumption, source segregation and process integration, and product longevity and circular economy.

114 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: NexSym as mentioned in this paper is a simulation and analytics framework for water-energy-food (WEF) nexus concepts, which can be used to support innovative solutions by balancing resource supply and demand and increasing synergies between components.

108 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a general design framework comprising an optional preliminary design stage followed by a simultaneous design stage based on mathematical optimisation is proposed to develop process systems engineering tools combined with the concept of resource accounting using exergy for the design of local production systems.

98 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, high efficient macroalgae based chemical factories and environmental protection have been comprehensively studied for the first time to displace fossil resources to mitigate climate change impact, and the highest to the lowest avoided social impacts will be from the displacements of animal based protein, sugar and minerals, in Indonesia, China and Philippines (producing 27 million tonnes per annum, 93% of global production).

86 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Flexible anaerobic fermentation and hydrothermal processes that can treat complex biomass as a whole to obtain a range of products within an integrated biorefinery concept are focused on.
Abstract: Biorefineries have been established since the 1980s for biofuel production, and there has been a switch lately from first to second generation feedstocks in order to avoid the food versus fuel dilemma. To a lesser extent, many opportunities have been investigated for producing chemicals from biomass using by-products of the present biorefineries, simple waste streams. Current facilities apply intensive pre-treatments to deal with single substrate types such as carbohydrates. However, most organic streams such as municipal solid waste or algal blooms present a high complexity and variable mixture of molecules, which makes specific compound production and separation difficult. Here we focus on flexible anaerobic fermentation and hydrothermal processes that can treat complex biomass as a whole to obtain a range of products within an integrated biorefinery concept.

84 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comprehensive review of different biorefinery models used for various biomass feedstocks such as lignocelluloses, algae, and numerous waste-types reveals that the social-economic aspect of the industrial sector has a major influence on the full adoption ofBiorefineries in circular bioeconomy.

440 citations

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TL;DR: The results point out the lack of consensus on terminologies and definitions, thus, based on semantic analysis, a definition is proposed and a definition of “circular economy” is proposed.

439 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It may take more time for the lignocellulosic biofuels to hit the market place than previously projected because of the challenges listed and lack of government policies to create the demand for biofuel.
Abstract: Biofuels that are produced from biobased materials are a good alternative to petroleum based fuels. They offer several benefits to society and the environment. Producing second generation biofuels is even more challenging than producing first generation biofuels due the complexity of the biomass and issues related to producing, harvesting, and transporting less dense biomass to centralized biorefineries. In addition to this logistic challenge, other challenges with respect to processing steps in converting biomass to liquid transportation fuel like pretreatment, hydrolysis, microbial fermentation, and fuel separation still exist and are discussed in this review. The possible coproducts that could be produced in the biorefinery and their importance to reduce the processing cost of biofuel are discussed. About $1 billion was spent in the year 2012 by the government agencies in US to meet the mandate to replace 30% existing liquid transportation fuels by 2022 which is 36 billion gallons/year. Other countries in the world have set their own targets to replace petroleum fuel by biofuels. Because of the challenges listed in this review and lack of government policies to create the demand for biofuels, it may take more time for the lignocellulosic biofuels to hit the market place than previously projected.

409 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the state of the art and future challenges in the recent development of biomass and associated transformation technologies for clean production of biofuels are reviewed, and a discussion of the synergistic integration of various biochemical and bioprocessing technologies is provided.

391 citations