Ethanol

Crown provides two processes to enhance the efficiency and profitability of ethanol plants by adding equipment either before or after the ethanol fermentation process.

Corn fractionation is the process of separating the germ and bran from the starch so that these products can be sold as value-added products and not end up as part of the starch fermentation process. The germ can be separated again to remove the oil by adding Crown’s solvent extraction and oil refining technologies to convert the germ into two additional premium products: animal feed and edible oil. A typical kernel contains 4% oil that can be sold as food-grade oil, which has more value than crude oil.

Biodiesel pretreatment is the process of taking the crude oil extracted from the back end of a dry-grind ethanol process and making it suitable for use in a biodiesel plant because the quality of this crude oil is typically lower than what most biodiesel plants need. Some biodiesel plants have already decided to add this pretreatment equipment at the same location as the biodiesel plant. Others have no current pretreatment capability and will need to buy properly pretreated oil.

Corn Fractionation

The Crown Fractionation System separates corn into three components: starch, germ and bran. Separating the non-fermentable products, such as germ and bran, from the starch increases an ethanol plant’s efficiency and throughput per bushel and is the first step to creating value-added co-products.

This process begins with the corn being tempered, which enables the corn to absorb the moisture required for fractionation. The tempered corn is conveyed to the degerminator, where it is fractured, separating the starch while maintaining the integrity of the germ. The fractionated corn is screened and aspirated, separating the starch, germ and bran. The starch is sent to the ethanol plant and the bran to storage for sale. The germ can be sent to oil recovery or milled and sold as feed.

The oil can be recovered by either mechanical extraction or solvent extraction. Mechanical extraction is done with mechanical screw presses. The mechanical screw press squeezes the oil out of the germ. The oil is clarified and then can be refined into an edible oil. Solvent extraction is a chemical extraction where the oil is extracted using a solvent. The oil from solvent extraction can also be refined into an edible oil.

Adding Crown’s extraction and oil refining technologies converts the germ into two additional premium products: animal feed and edible oil. A typical kernel contains 4% oil that can be sold as food-grade oil, which has more