- published: 12 Nov 2016
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Corn stover consists of the leaves and stalks of maize (Zea mays ssp. mays L.) plants left in a field after harvest and consists of the residue: stalk; the leaf, husk, and cob remaining in the field following the harvest of cereal grain. Stover makes up about half of the yield of a crop and is similar to straw. Corn stover is a very common agricultural product in areas of large amounts of corn production. As well as the non-grain part of harvested corn, the stover can also contain other weeds and grasses. It "has low water content and is very bulky."
Stover can be grazed as forage or collected for use as fodder but is commonly not utilized. It can also be used as a fuel for bioenergy or as feedstock for bioproducts. Corn stover, together with other lignocellulosic biomass, potentially amounts to 1.3 billion tons of raw materials over the next 50 years that could be used for fuel production.
In the Netherlands and Belgium large improvements on yield are achieved by harvesting the full plant and crushing it while harvesting. The stover is primarily used as fodder for cows during the winter season. It is known as kuilmais. Field corn and sweet corn, two different types of maize, have relatively similar corn stover products. Corn stover is not harvested in all areas where corn is produced. In fact, "some agronomists question whether taking stover out of the field annually will have a negative impact on soil fertility and structure."
Chopping with a Hiniker 5600 Flail Windrower. Baling with a Hesston 2270 XD. Cleaning up and stadking with a ProAg 12-bale Stacker. This was a demonstration put on by Bioindustrial Innovation Canada of Sarnia with equipment from Advantage Farm Equipment. The idea is to have a farmer owned co-op refinery to process these bales into cellulose sugar. http://www.bincanada.ca/
Specialized equipment for harvesting and baling of corn stover is demonstrated at the Don McGugan farm in southwestern Ontario. Corn stover could provide key feedstock in a regional biomass to sugar project. http://biotalk.ca/ https://twitter.com/BioTalkca https://www.linkedin.com/company/biotalk-ca https://www.facebook.com/biotalkca https://plus.google.com/+BiotalkCanada
The use of satellite imaging offers an efficient way to to predict corn grain yields.This effectively indicates high yield field targets for corn stover harvesting, well in advance of the actual harvesting. Corn stover is a promising sustainable feedstock for the production of cellulosic sugar.
sample probe
DuPont Industrial Biosciences is creating clean cellulosic ethanol from biomass such as crop waste into something useful. The Boy Who Made Something Out Of Anything is the story of a young boy whose insatiable curiosity drives him to create wonderful inventions out of things that have been overlooked or cast aside. Like the boy in the film, DuPont has found a way to transform something we haven't used into something useful. Our new cellulosic ethanol plant in Nevada, Iowa is using corn stover to create biofuels as a sustainable energy alternative driving the bio-based economy. Learn more about how DuPont is advancing biotechnology for the better at http://www.dupont.com/products-and-services/industrial-biotechnology/advanced-biofuels.html
Corn stover bales were delivered and stacked at the BioCentury Research Farm for storage trials.
Ethanol is now being made from cellulosic material other than corn, such as corn cobs, stover and even switch grass. Michelle Rook looks at the potential for this next generation biofuel and how it will also help the environment. Consumer segent on KELO-TV 5pm News air date 11-22-11.
Cellulosic ethanol made from corn stover such as corn cobs and stalks represents the next generation of biofuels in the United States. Michelle Rook reports that once commercialized it could double to amount of ethanol produced in the U.S. and help lower gas prices at the pump. Heartland Consumer Segment on KELO-TV 5pm News air date 3-27-12.
(3BL Media) July 17, 2012 - A patent that opens the door for the creation of biofuels from abundantly available plant fiber has been issued to researchers at the Wisconsin Institute for Sustainable Technology (WIST) at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point. WIST’s first patent is for a process that makes biofuels and other products from cellulosic plant material, including agricultural residues such as corn stover or plants grown specifically for fuel production, such as hardwood and softwood trees. The process is also a key step in making other high-value bioproducts. “This gives us an economically viable way to use grass, trees or wood waste to make renewable fuels and chemicals,” said Eric Singsaas, associate professor of biology at UW-Stevens Point and co-inventor of the process,...
Chopping with a Hiniker 5600 Flail Windrower. Baling with a Hesston 2270 XD. Cleaning up and stadking with a ProAg 12-bale Stacker. This was a demonstration put on by Bioindustrial Innovation Canada of Sarnia with equipment from Advantage Farm Equipment. The idea is to have a farmer owned co-op refinery to process these bales into cellulose sugar. http://www.bincanada.ca/
Specialized equipment for harvesting and baling of corn stover is demonstrated at the Don McGugan farm in southwestern Ontario. Corn stover could provide key feedstock in a regional biomass to sugar project. http://biotalk.ca/ https://twitter.com/BioTalkca https://www.linkedin.com/company/biotalk-ca https://www.facebook.com/biotalkca https://plus.google.com/+BiotalkCanada
The use of satellite imaging offers an efficient way to to predict corn grain yields.This effectively indicates high yield field targets for corn stover harvesting, well in advance of the actual harvesting. Corn stover is a promising sustainable feedstock for the production of cellulosic sugar.
sample probe
DuPont Industrial Biosciences is creating clean cellulosic ethanol from biomass such as crop waste into something useful. The Boy Who Made Something Out Of Anything is the story of a young boy whose insatiable curiosity drives him to create wonderful inventions out of things that have been overlooked or cast aside. Like the boy in the film, DuPont has found a way to transform something we haven't used into something useful. Our new cellulosic ethanol plant in Nevada, Iowa is using corn stover to create biofuels as a sustainable energy alternative driving the bio-based economy. Learn more about how DuPont is advancing biotechnology for the better at http://www.dupont.com/products-and-services/industrial-biotechnology/advanced-biofuels.html
Corn stover bales were delivered and stacked at the BioCentury Research Farm for storage trials.
Ethanol is now being made from cellulosic material other than corn, such as corn cobs, stover and even switch grass. Michelle Rook looks at the potential for this next generation biofuel and how it will also help the environment. Consumer segent on KELO-TV 5pm News air date 11-22-11.
Cellulosic ethanol made from corn stover such as corn cobs and stalks represents the next generation of biofuels in the United States. Michelle Rook reports that once commercialized it could double to amount of ethanol produced in the U.S. and help lower gas prices at the pump. Heartland Consumer Segment on KELO-TV 5pm News air date 3-27-12.
(3BL Media) July 17, 2012 - A patent that opens the door for the creation of biofuels from abundantly available plant fiber has been issued to researchers at the Wisconsin Institute for Sustainable Technology (WIST) at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point. WIST’s first patent is for a process that makes biofuels and other products from cellulosic plant material, including agricultural residues such as corn stover or plants grown specifically for fuel production, such as hardwood and softwood trees. The process is also a key step in making other high-value bioproducts. “This gives us an economically viable way to use grass, trees or wood waste to make renewable fuels and chemicals,” said Eric Singsaas, associate professor of biology at UW-Stevens Point and co-inventor of the process,...
Is the Price of Biomass Right for You? Calculating Your Cost of Producing Crop Residues and Energy Crops Madhu Khanna, Nick Paulson and Tom Voigt With emerging technologies for bioenergy production, demand for biomass from corn stover and energy crops, like miscanthus and switchgrass, is expected to grow. What is the yield and cost of producing these bioenergy feedstocks at different locations in the US? At what price would it be profitable to produce them? How will the Biomass Crop Assistance Program affect feedstock costs? This information is critical to making profitable choices about which feedstock to produce, where to locate a biomass processing facility and how to price biomass. Join us to hear about a Feedstock Cost and Profitability Calculator that you can customize or us...
Cellulosic ethanol is a biofuel produced from wood, grasses, or the inedible parts of plants. It is a type of biofuel produced from lignocellulose, a structural material that comprises much of the mass of plants. Lignocellulose is composed mainly of cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin. Corn stover, Panicum virgatum (switchgrass), Miscanthus grass species, wood chips and the byproducts of lawn and tree maintenance are some of the more popular cellulosic materials for ethanol production. Production of ethanol from lignocellulose has the advantage of abundant and diverse raw material compared to sources such as corn and cane sugars, but requires a greater amount of processing to make the sugar monomers available to the microorganisms typically used to produce ethanol by fermentation. This v...
Cellulosic Ethanol: A Technology Update This video is under creative common (cc video), attribution license By EESIonline Learn more and download slides at: eesi.org/briefings/view/100614cellulosic The Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI) held a briefing examining the technologies that are making commercial-scale cellulosic ethanol production a reality. Cellulosic ethanol is produced from agricultural residue — primarily, at this time, from corn stover (leaves, stalks and husks), which is removed in a sustainable manner after the harvest. Cellulosic ethanol is commercially produced at one U.S. facility, with two more coming on-line later this year. Combined, these three facilities are expected to produce a total of approximately 80 million gallons of renewable fuel per year. ...
Learn more and download slides at: http://www.eesi.org/briefings/view/100614cellulosic Table of contents: http://youtu.be/pDWwpCRHp_M?t=15s The Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI) held a briefing examining the technologies that are making commercial-scale cellulosic ethanol production a reality. Cellulosic ethanol is produced from agricultural residue — primarily, at this time, from corn stover (leaves, stalks and husks), which is removed in a sustainable manner after the harvest. Cellulosic ethanol is commercially produced at one U.S. facility, with two more coming on-line later this year. Combined, these three facilities are expected to produce a total of approximately 80 million gallons of renewable fuel per year. Contrary to popular belief, cellulosic fuels are not ‘phanto...
Professor Jerald Schnoor, of the University of Iowa, presents "Water Implications of Biofuels in the U.S." on September 16, 2013 as part of the Andlinger Center's 2013-2014 Highlight Seminar Series. ABSTRACT The U.S. Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 provides a goal of 36 billion gallons of biofuels by 2022. Currently we produce about 14 billion gallons each year, mostly from corn for ethanol production, which consumes 40% of the corn crop in the U.S. The impetus of the national goal is a desire for greater energy security and lower greenhouse gas emissions associated with transportation fuels. But there are serious environmental, social, and water implications from producing that much biofuel, particularly from corn and soybeans, which are scheduled to peak at about 15 b...
Lane Segerstrom is the CEO of Corn Board Manufacturing, Inc. The University of Illinois entered into a license agreement for CMBI to utilize a corn-based structural composite technology initially developed by faculty in the UI Material Sciences Department. CMBI's product, CornBoard, turns corn stover into a wood alternative. Lane is an exceptional promoter, marketer and serial entrepreneur. He developed CD Poster, a product that sells at major retailers, and co-founded Omega Docs, Inc. to develop document imagining technology, which was acquired by Newell Rubbermaid in just 20 months. Lane will talk about getting to market, selling your product more effectively, and standing out from others in your industry.
G David Tilman is Regents' Professor and McKnight Presidential Chair in Ecology at the University of Minnesota, and Director of the University's Cedar Creek Ecosystem Science Reserve. His research explores how managed and natural ecosystems can meet human needs for food and energy sustainably. Tilman has written five books and published more than 200 peer-reviewed papers; he has been the world's most highly cited environmental scientist for three decades. In his Food for Thought lecture, David suggests solutions: Biofuels can be produced from perennials grown on agriculturally degraded lands without displacing food production or causing loss of biodiversity through habitat destruction. Similarly, biofuels made from waste biomass, manure, corn stover, forest slash, or thinnings offer imm...