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ARS soil scientist Doug Karlen and technician
Tanya Ferguson evaluate how harvesting cornstalk residues for ethanol
production can impact soil quality, future crop production, and how ethanol
production might vary with harvest methods. Click the image for more
information about it.
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Protecting Soils and Producing Biofuel with Corn
Stover
By Ann Perry
October 27, 2008 Those lonely cornstalkscalled
corn stoverleft behind in the fields after the grain harvest is complete
could someday become valuable raw material for the production of cellulosic
ethanol. In the meantime, Agricultural
Research Service (ARS) soil scientist
Doug
Karlen is determining which portion of the plant would work best for
cellulosic ethanol production. He's also studying the amount of stover that
needs to remain in the fields to prevent soil erosion and recycle essential
plant nutrients.
Karlen works at the
ARS
National Soil Tilth Laboratory in Ames, Iowa. He partnered with a research
team that harvested cornstalks at four different heights to quantify the amount
and quality of stover that could be obtained using different removal
strategies.
The team also evaluated several aspects of harvesting stover for ethanol
production. These factors included engineering challenges associated with
harvesting, how stover removal could potentially impact future crop production
and soil quality, and how potential ethanol production might vary with harvest
methods.
As part of the study, stover yields from the four harvest groups were
converted to ethanol using biochemical processing. The researchers measured the
resulting net energy yield and decided that the most likely factor driving
conversion efficiency was the level of moisture in the feedstock.
After evaluating harvest convenience and speed, acceptable stover water
content and other factors, the researchers concluded that a "normal
cut" harvest would result in the most economical and efficient stover
harvest for biofuel production. When the "normal cut" stover was
harvested, at least 16 inches of stubble remained on the field.
Karlen's research is part of a larger national effort to evaluate the
environmental and economic costs and benefits that might accrue from
large-scale corn stover removal for cellulosic ethanol production. This
projectthe Renewable Energy Assessment Project, or REAPsupports
corn producers who want to optimize sustainable practices that maximize
production, reduce costs and protect natural resources.
Read
more about this research in the October 2008 issue of Agricultural
Research magazine.
ARS is a scientific research agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.