U of Wisc develops new plant based diesel fuel

   / U of Wisc develops new plant based diesel fuel #1  

Bob_Skurka

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Scientists Break Ground With New Green Diesel

MADISON, Wis. -- Researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison College of Engineering have discovered a new way to make a diesel-like liquid fuel from carbohydrates commonly found in plants, according to RenewableEnergyaccess.com.

In the June 3 issue of Science journal, graduate students George Huber, Juben Chheda and Chris Barrett, along with Professor James Dumesic detailed a four-phase catalytic reactor in which corn and other biomass-derived carbohydrates can be converted to sulphur-free liquid alkanes resulting in an ideal additive for diesel transportation.

“It's a very efficient process,” Huber, one of the three chemical and biological engineering grad students, said. “The fuel produced contains 90 percent of the energy found in the carbohydrate and hydrogen feed. If you look at the carbohydrate source such as corn, our new process has the potential to create twice the energy as is created in using corn to make ethanol.”

About 67 percent of the energy required to make ethanol is consumed in fermenting and distilling corn, the report concluded. As a result, ethanol production creates 1.1 units of energy for every unit of energy consumed. In the UW-Madison process, the desired alkanes spontaneously separate from water with no additional heating or distillation required. The result is the creation of 2.2 units of energy for every unit of energy consumed in energy production.

“The fuel we're making stores a considerable amount of hydrogen,” said Dumesic. “Each molecule of hydrogen is used to convert each carbon atom in the carbohydrate reactant to an alkane. It's a very high yield. We don't lose a lot of carbon. The carbon acts as an effective energy carrier for transportation vehicles. It's not unlike the way our own bodies use carbohydrates to store energy.”

Because the UW-Madison process works with a range of carbohydrates, a wide range of plants, and more parts of the plant, can be consumed to make fuel.

“The current delivered cost of biomass is comparable or even cheaper than petroleum-based feedstock on an energy basis,” Huber says. “This is one step in figuring out how to efficiently use our biomass resources.”
 
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Clearly the advantage is in the efficiency of making it - note their statistic that "67 percent of the energy required to make ethanol is consumed in fermenting and distilling corn" - if you add in the fuel for the tractors and harvesters, and the energy cost of the fertilizer and other indirect energy costs of growing corn or soybeans, then most biofuels become a net energy loss, or in other words, it takes more energy to make them than they produce by burning the end product. If the production efficiency of the new fuel is indeed twice that of conventional biodiesel then they may really have something worth doing.
 
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You leave out one important factor, the byproducts of distilling corn are fed to cattle and hogs, and is a very efficient feed. This is a common misconception.
 
   / U of Wisc develops new plant based diesel fuel #5  
Cultivation of any row crops strictly for fuel extraction purposes is a losing proposition everywhere all the time, ie corn->ethanol or soybeans->biodiesel..

Waste biomass reclamation does not include the planting of corn, soybeans, cancola, or anything else specifically for harvest for energy extraction. Instead, the biowastes from all unuseable byproducts of food prouction, timber harvest, slaughterhouses, feedlots, municipal wastes, industrial biolgical wastes, etc. is turned into synthetic gas for hydrocarbon production for fuel.
 

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