New Uses for Soy Hulls
When soybeans
are crushed, the three end products are oil, meal (protein) and hulls. And of
the three, soy hulls have the least value. The crusher will blend some off in
the meal and find other uses for them. But now science has found new uses,
turning hulls into value-added products.
A lot of hulls
are produced annually. For example, the 2018 crop year is expected to crush
over 2 billion U.S. bushels (120 billion lbs.), which will be a historical
record. Soybeans contain 3 to 5 lbs. of hulls per bushel and a 2-billion-bushel
crush (at 4 lbs. of hull per bu) will generate 80 million lbs. of hulls that
need a place to go.
Soy hulls are the outer coating that is removed when
soybeans are processed and is a fiber co-product used primarily by the
livestock feed industry. You can learn more about the basics of using soy hulls
in the feed industry by clicking here. Processors may blend hulls back into meal
and create two classes, 48% high-pro and 44% low-pro meal. The 48% protein has
little or no hulls. And occasionally, beef and dairy producers buy hulls to
blend in with feed directly.
Jagannadh
Satyavolu, scientist and theme leader with the Biomass and Biofuels Group at
Conn Center for Renewable Energy Research, the University of Louisville in
Kentucky, has had an interest in creating added value to soy hulls. “When I was
with Cargill, we developed HemiForce enhanced fiber additives from soy hulls
from our Cedar Rapids plant. In Louisville, we produce xylose (a low-calorie
sugar) from the hulls. And currently we are working on carbons for multiple
applications (including for lithium-ion batteries). We are also using modified
soy hulls in polymer composite filaments for 3-D printing.”
Soy hulls contain primarily cellulose and
hemicellulose along with some lignin and pectin that hold it all together.
Satyavolu said the first step they take is selectively separating hemicellulose
from the hulls. “From the hemicellulose we can extract and isolate xylose, a
five-carbon, low-calorie sugar that can be used as a diabetic sweetener and
help reduce obesity-related metabolic disorders. It can also be used to produce bioplastics
and biofuels. Corn, rice and soy hulls are all good sources of xylose sugar
with a commercial value of $3,000 per ton.”
The remaining fiber is primarily cellulose, a very
sustainable fiber with industrial uses. The United Soybean Board (USB) provided
funds to study how to take these cellulose fibers and create a natural fiber
polymer composite used for 3-D printing.
“Today’s
lightweight composites use carbon fibers that are expensive. And the low
molecular weight cellulose can be physically and/or chemically modified for
polymer composites while improving strength, reducing weight and improving
functionality of the fiber. Natural fibers from soy hulls reduce weight, cost
less and are more sustainable.”
Lastly, the
cellulose fiber fraction can be carbonized and activated, creating an activated
carbon that is commonly used by industry. “It has a very high surface area of
about 1000 square meters per gram of product. As activated carbon it can be
used to capture and filter out impurities in products, it can be used in
lithium-ion batteries or as fluency agent,” said Satyavolu. One possibility he
suggested is combining Dust, a talc replacement made from a soybean meal
protein isolate and carbons made from soy hulls to create an ideal fluency
agent all made from soybean end products.



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