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Green Gasoline from
Switchgrass
April 16, 2008
Researchers have made a breakthrough in the development of "green
gasoline," a liquid identical to standard gasoline yet created from
sustainable biomass sources like switchgrass and poplar trees.
George
Huber poses with a vial of green gasoline compounds.
Reporting in the cover article of the April 7, 2008 issue of Chemistry &
Sustainability, Energy & Materials (ChemSusChem), chemical engineer and
National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER awardee George Huber of the
University of Massachusetts-Amherst (UMass) and his graduate students
Torren Carlson and Tushar Vispute announced the first direct conversion
of plant cellulose into gasoline components.
In the same issue, James Dumesic and colleagues from the University of
Wisconsin-Madison announce an integrated process for creating chemical
components of jet fuel using a green gasoline approach. While Dumesic's
group had previously demonstrated the production of jet-fuel components
using separate steps, their current work shows that the steps can be
integrated and run sequentially, without complex separation and
purification processes between reactors.
While it may be five to 10 years before green gasoline arrives at the
pump or finds its way into a fighter jet, these breakthroughs have
bypassed significant hurdles to bringing green gasoline biofuels to
market.
"It is likely that the future consumer will not even know that they are
putting biofuels into their car," said Huber. "Biofuels in the future
will most likely be similar in chemical composition to gasoline and
diesel fuel used today. The challenge for chemical engineers is to
efficiently produce liquid fuels from biomass while fitting into the
existing infrastructure today."
Components
for green gasoline can be synthesized in a laboratory from agricultural
waste. New processes are breaking the barriers to producing green
gasoline on the large scale needed for industrial production.
For their new approach, the UMass researchers rapidly heated cellulose
in the presence of solid catalysts, materials that speed up reactions
without sacrificing themselves in the process. They then rapidly cooled
the products to create a liquid that contains many of the compounds
found in gasoline.
The entire process was completed in under two minutes using relatively
moderate amounts of heat. The compounds that formed in that single step,
like naphthalene and toluene, make up one fourth of the suite of
chemicals found in gasoline. The liquid can be further treated to form
the remaining fuel components or can be used "as is" for a high octane
gasoline blend.
"Green gasoline is an attractive alternative to bioethanol since it can
be used in existing engines and does not incur the 30 percent gas
mileage penalty of ethanol-based flex fuel," said John Regalbuto, who
directs the Catalysis and Biocatalysis Program at NSF and supported this
research.
"In theory it requires much less energy to make than ethanol, giving it
a smaller carbon footprint and making it cheaper to produce," Regalbuto
said. "Making it from cellulose sources such as switchgrass or poplar
trees grown as energy crops, or forest or agricultural residues such as
wood chips or corn stover, solves the lifecycle greenhouse gas problem
that has recently surfaced with corn ethanol and soy biodiesel."
James
Dumesic of the University of Wisconsin-Madison and his former student
George Huber, now at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, are
breaking new ground in the development of an alternative fuel called
"green gasoline."
Beyond academic laboratories, both small businesses and Fortune 500
petroleum refiners are pursuing green gasoline. Companies are designing
ways to hybridize their existing refineries to enable petroleum products
including fuels, textiles, and plastics to be made from either crude oil
or biomass and the military community has shown strong interest in
making jet fuel and diesel from the same sources.
"Huber's new process for the direct conversion of cellulose to gasoline
aromatics is at the leading edge of the new ‘Green Gasoline' alternate
energy paradigm that NSF, along with other federal agencies, is helping
to promote," states Regalbuto.
Not only is the method a compact way to treat a great deal of biomass in
a short time, Regalbuto emphasized that the process, in principle, does
not require any external energy. "In fact, from the extra heat that will
be released, you can generate electricity in addition to the biofuel,"
he said. "There will not be just a small carbon footprint for the
process; by recovering heat and generating electricity, there won't be
any footprint."
The latest pathways to produce green gasoline, green diesel and green
jet fuel are found in a report sponsored by NSF, the Department of
Energy and the American Chemical Society entitled "Breaking the Chemical
and Engineering Barriers to Lignocellulosic Biofuels: Next Generation
Hydrocarbon Biorefineries" released April 1 (http://www.ecs.umass.edu/biofuels/).
In the report, Huber and a host of leaders from academia, industry and
government present a plan for making green gasoline a practical solution
for the impending fuel crisis.
"We are currently working on understanding the chemistry of this process
and designing new catalysts and reactors for this single step technique.
This fundamental chemical understanding will allow us to design more
efficient processes that will accelerate the commercialization of green
gasoline," Huber said. |