An Engineering Approach to Estimating Carbon Dioxide Consumption and Recovery Potential in the Brewery
Calculations from the application of the first principles of engineering are presented, as well as from physical measurements, to estimate carbon dioxide consumption in the brewery. This article provides a review of realistic harvestable CO2 that precedes a discussion of approaches to enhance and increase CO2 recovery for reuse. Understanding real consumption of CO2 in our production processes (using a 100,000 hL/year brewery model) can guide us in determining what can be harvested/recovered. (For simplification, consumption of CO2 at centrifuge and water de-aeration is not considered). An alternative means to compute CO2 generated in a fermenter in a volumetric flow rate is presented. A discussion of gas-blanketing contrasted with nearly complete gas displacement in the tank presents the calculation for how many tank volumes are required of the inert gas. A review of standard operating procedures that minimize dissolved oxygen pickup in bright beer tanks is shared, followed by an engineering economics-based calculation for a decision-maker to compute whether selecting a CO2 collection and storage solution is worthwhile to their brewery. The various commercial systems offered by solution providers are not discussed within the scope of this article.
Keywords: capture, reuse, carbon dioxide, optimization, production, reclamation