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Dive into the research topics where Ryan Davis is active.

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Featured researches published by Ryan Davis.


Bioresource Technology | 2015

The potentials and challenges of algae based biofuels: A review of the techno-economic, life cycle, and resource assessment modeling

Jason C. Quinn; Ryan Davis

Microalgae biofuel production has been extensively evaluated through resource, economic and life cycle assessments. Resource assessments consistently identify land as non-limiting and highlight the need to consider siting based on combined geographical constraints of land and other critical resources such as water and carbon dioxide. Economic assessments report a selling cost of fuel that ranges between


Environmental Science & Technology | 2014

Integrated Evaluation of Cost, Emissions, and Resource Potential for Algal Biofuels at the National Scale

Ryan Davis; Daniel Fishman; Edward D. Frank; Michael C. Johnson; Susanne B. Jones; Christopher Kinchin; Richard L. Skaggs; Erik R. Venteris; Mark S. Wigmosta

1.64 and over


Green Chemistry | 2015

Acid-catalyzed algal biomass pretreatment for integrated lipid and carbohydrate-based biofuels production

Lieve M.L. Laurens; Nick Nagle; Ryan Davis; N. Sweeney; S. Van Wychen; A. Lowell; Philip T. Pienkos

30 gal(-1) consistent with large variability reported in the life cycle literature, -75 to 534 gCO2-eq MJ(-1). Large drivers behind such variability stem from differences in productivity assumptions, pathway technologies, and system boundaries. Productivity represents foundational units in these assessments with current assumed yields in various assessments varying by a factor of 60. A review of the literature in these areas highlights the need for harmonized assessments such that direct comparisons of alternative processing technologies can be made on the metrics of resource requirements, economic feasibility, and environmental impact.


Archive | 2013

Whole Algae Hydrothermal Liquefaction Technology Pathway

Mary J. Biddy; Ryan Davis; Susanne B. Jones; Yunhua Zhu

Costs, emissions, and resource availability were modeled for the production of 5 billion gallons yr(-1) (5 BGY) of renewable diesel in the United States from Chlorella biomass by hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL). The HTL model utilized data from a continuous 1-L reactor including catalytic hydrothermal gasification of the aqueous phase, and catalytic hydrotreatment of the HTL oil. A biophysical algae growth model coupled with weather and pond simulations predicted biomass productivity from experimental growth parameters, allowing site-by-site and temporal prediction of biomass production. The 5 BGY scale required geographically and climatically distributed sites. Even though screening down to 5 BGY significantly reduced spatial and temporal variability, site-to-site, season-to-season, and interannual variations in productivity affected economic and environmental performance. Performance metrics based on annual average or peak productivity were inadequate; temporally and spatially explicit computations allowed more rigorous analysis of these dynamic systems. For example, 3-season operation with a winter shutdown was favored to avoid high greenhouse gas emissions, but economic performance was harmed by underutilized equipment during slow-growth periods. Thus, analysis of algal biofuel pathways must combine spatiotemporal resource assessment, economic analysis, and environmental analysis integrated over many sites when assessing national scale performance.


Archive | 2014

NREL 2012 Achievement of Ethanol Cost Targets: Biochemical Ethanol Fermentation via Dilute-Acid Pretreatment and Enzymatic Hydrolysis of Corn Stover

Ling Tao; Dan Schell; Ryan Davis; Eric Tan; Rick Elander; Adam Bratis

One of the major challenges associated with algal biofuels production in a biorefinery-type setting is improving biomass utilization in its entirety, increasing the process energetic yields and providing economically viable and scalable co-product concepts. We demonstrate the effectiveness of a novel, integrated technology based on moderate temperatures and low pH to convert the carbohydrates in wet algal biomass to soluble sugars for fermentation, while making lipids more accessible for downstream extraction and leaving a protein-enriched fraction behind. We studied the effect of harvest timing on the conversion yields, using two algal strains; Chlorella and Scenedesmus, generating biomass with distinctive compositional ratios of protein, carbohydrate, and lipids. We found that the late harvest Scenedesmus biomass had the maximum theoretical biofuel potential at 143 gasoline gallon equivalent (GGE) combined fuel yield per dry ton biomass, followed by late harvest Chlorella at 128 GGE per ton. Our experimental data show a clear difference between the two strains, as Scenedesmus was more successfully converted in this process with a demonstrated 97 GGE per ton. Our measurements indicated a release of >90% of the available glucose in the hydrolysate liquors and an extraction and recovery of up to 97% of the fatty acids from wet biomass. Techno-economic analysis for the combined product yields indicates that this process exhibits the potential to improve per-gallon fuel costs by up to 33% compared to a lipids-only process for one strain, Scenedesmus, grown to the mid-point harvest condition.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2017

Development of algae biorefinery concepts for biofuels and bioproducts; a perspective on process-compatible products and their impact on cost-reduction

Lieve M.L. Laurens; Jennifer Markham; David W. Templeton; Earl Christensen; Stefanie Van Wychen; Eric W. Vadelius; Melodie Chen-Glasser; Tao Dong; Ryan Davis; Philip T. Pienkos

In support of the Bioenergy Technologies Office, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) and the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) are undertaking studies of biomass conversion technologies to hydrocarbon fuels to identify barriers and target research toward reducing conversion costs. Process designs and preliminary economic estimates for each of these pathway cases were developed using rigorous modeling tools (Aspen Plus and Chemcad). These analyses incorporated the best information available at the time of development, including data from recent pilot and bench-scale demonstrations, collaborative industrial and academic partners, and published literature and patents. This pathway case investigates the feasibility of using whole wet microalgae as a feedstock for conversion via hydrothermal liquefaction. Technical barriers and key research needs have been assessed in order for the hydrothermal liquefaction of microalgae to be competitive with petroleum-derived gasoline, diesel and jet range blendstocks.


Archive | 2013

Algal Lipid Extraction and Upgrading to Hydrocarbons Technology Pathway

Ryan Davis; Mary J. Biddy; Susanne B. Jones

For the DOE Bioenergy Technologies Office, the annual State of Technology (SOT) assessment is an essential activity for quantifying the benefits of biochemical platform research. This assessment has historically allowed the impact of research progress achieved through targeted Bioenergy Technologies Office funding to be quantified in terms of economic improvements within the context of a fully integrated cellulosic ethanol production process. As such, progress toward the ultimate 2012 goal of demonstrating cost-competitive cellulosic ethanol technology can be tracked. With an assumed feedstock cost for corn stover of


Green Chemistry | 2016

Techno-economic analysis of a conceptual biofuel production process from bioethylene produced by photosynthetic recombinant cyanobacteria

Jennifer Markham; Ling Tao; Ryan Davis; Nina Voulis; Largus T. Angenent; Justin Ungerer; Jianping Yu

58.50/ton this target has historically been set at


Archive | 2013

Biological Conversion of Sugars to Hydrocarbons Technology Pathway

Ryan Davis; Mary J. Biddy; Eric Tan; Ling Tao; Susanne B. Jones

1.41/gal ethanol for conversion costs only (exclusive of feedstock) and


Direct Microbial Conversion of Biomass to Advanced Biofuels | 2015

Perspectives on Process Analysis for Advanced Biofuel Production

Christopher J. Scarlata; Ryan Davis; Ling Tao; Eric Tan; Mary J. Biddy

2.15/gal total production cost (inclusive of feedstock) or minimum ethanol selling price (MESP). This year, fully integrated cellulosic ethanol production data generated by National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) researchers in their Integrated Biorefinery Research Facility (IBRF) successfully demonstrated performance commensurate with both the FY 2012 SOT MESP target of

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Mary J. Biddy

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Eric Tan

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Jennifer Markham

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Ling Tao

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Philip T. Pienkos

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Susanne B. Jones

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Yunhua Zhu

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Christopher Kinchin

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Edward D. Frank

Argonne National Laboratory

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