The corn industry produces almost 4,000 products from every bushel. Oil refineries produce fuels and ingredients for an estimated 6,000 products with a thoroughness that actually squeezes 44 gallons of products from every 42-gallon barrel of crude.
Scientists last month unveiled new technology intended to move soybeans, second only to corn as the top food crop in the U.S., along that same use-to-all path as a raw material for a wider portfolio of products. They described it-a new integrated soybean biorefinery - at the 244th National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society, the world's largest scientific society, held in Philadelphia.
"Mention soybeans to most people, and they immediately think of the oil," says Ramani Narayan, Michigan State University Distinguished Professor, who reported on the new technology. "Soybean oil is the world's most widely used edible oil. It's in some margarines, shortenings, mayonnaise, salad dressings, frozen foods, baked goods, and many other items. But soybeans are about more than oil. Soybeans are nuggets of green gold that can be a treasure trove of ingredients for other products, and our new biorefinery provides a glimpse of that potential."
The biorefinery is a relatively new concept, based on the approach used at oil refineries, which produce not just fuels from crude oil, but chemicals that become ingredients for thousands of other everyday products. Biorefineries use not oil as their raw material, but biomass - plant material - like corn and convert it into ethanol fuel, for instance, and a range of other products.
Narayan says soybeans pack much of corn's potential as a raw material, or "feedstock," for biorefineries. But soybean processing facilities traditionally have focused mainly on producing oil, which also has nonfood uses in paints and inks, for instance, and soybean meal for livestock feed.
The biorefinery can use well-established chemical processes to transform other components in soybeans into an array of valuable materials, Narayan says. Proteins in soybean meal, for instance, can be processed into ingredients used to make a variety of polyurethanes, including rigid foam insulation, and flexible foams for packaging, as well as coatings and adhesives.
The soybean meal can be processed further to yield critical components used in polyester plastics for fabrics, ropes, car tires, plastic bottles, and liquid crystal display screens; Nylon and Kevlar for bulletproof vests; and fire-resistant Nomex.
Likewise, triglycerides in soybean oil can be processed into ingredients used to make formaldehyde-free building insulation. The triglycerides can further be processed to manufacture adhesives, sealants, paints, plastic for toys, and clothing using a process that doesn't require what are called isocyanates. Both formaldehyde and isocyanates are potentially toxic materials, and better alternatives are preferred for consumer goods. Soybean oil also can yield ingredients for coatings, used on electronic circuit boards, power lines, and transformers, and the soybean hulls can be chemically modified to make electro-rheological fluids which can be used for high-performance brakes and clutches, Narayan says.
"The biorefinery can utilize essentially every component of the soybean in the production of bio-based ingredients for high-value products," he says. "It makes sense from a sustainability standpoint, in which we strive to reduce our dependence on petroleum as a feedstock. It also benefits the soybean farmers and raises the value of the local economy."
The American Chemical Society is a nonprofit organization chartered by the U.S. Congress. With more than 164,000 members, it claims to be the world's largest scientific society and a global leader in providing access to chemistry-related research through multiple databases, peer-reviewed journals, and scientific conferences.