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"Mass Culture of Microalgae for Biofuels
"New IREE funding for our thermochemical conversion R&D
Liquid fuels account for more than 45% of the total energy use in the U.S. Liquid fuels have high energy densities, are easy to transport, store, and handle, and are distributed through established infrastructure. Therefore biomass derived liquid fuels have a great potential to replace petroleum-based liquid fuels. Pyrolysis is the most common thermochemical process to convert solid biomass to bio-oils. Use of as produced bio-oils is impractical because of their poor combustion properties, low heating value, and high storage instability. The goal of the research is to develop processes to turn liquids and gases from thermochemical conversion of biomass to high quality hydrocarbon liquid fuels. Our research will be focused on the understanding and development of several innovative conversion and upgrading/reforming processes that (1) convert solid biomass to bio-crude and syngas using catalytic pyrolysis and gasification , (2) upgrade bio-crude to high quality liquid and (3) catalytically reform syngas to liquid fuels. The mechanistic studies will be conducted in Ruan and Ye’s labs with in situ pyrolysis analyzers and other advanced instruments."
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"Greenhouse Gas Emissions
The well-to-wheel greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions for methanol (made from natural gas) when used as a vehicle fuel are very similar in magnitude to GHGs from using gasoline. Methanol made from coal will have similar GHG emissions if the excess carbon dioxide is sequestered. Methanol made from biomass and other renewable feedstocks will have very low GHGs or even GHG credits because emissions of methane (a strong GHG) released from these sources are reduced. Vehicles designed specifically for methanol will emit lower GHGs due to their higher efficiency compared to gasoline vehicles."
Methanol and ethanol have similar advantageous properties when used as a vehicle fuel. Ethanol is an excellent co-solvent for methanol when used in low-level blends. E85 FFVs could be modified easily and inexpensively (less than $100) to accept methanol either as M85 or in high-level blends with ethanol. Methanol’s higher octane than ethanol creates the opportunity for more efficient operation of E85 FFVs. Production of methanol requires less water than ethanol and avoids the “food vs. fuel” debate. Using mature technology for biomass gasification, one ton of forest thinnings removed to help prevent forest fires can be converted into 160 to 170 gallons of methanol fuel.(Conversion efficiency of coal would be even better.) By comparison, one ton of corn or other land-intensive biomass crops may someday generate 60-80 gallons of cellulosic ethanol."
The “Methanol Economy”
An immediately implementable alternative to the “Hydrogen Economy” is the “Methanol Economy” where methanol serves as an energy carrier and source for production of petrochemicals. Methanol can be produced from carbon dioxide, which can be captured at the source of fossil fuel combustion (e.g., coal power plants) (Their comment - not ours.) or mined directly from the air, and water. All of the carbon dioxide converted to methanol is recycled, so there are zero net carbon dioxide emissions from the combustion of the methanol, and the water used as the hydrogen source can also be recycled. When nuclear or renewable energy is used to capture the carbon dioxide and produce the methanol, the net carbon dioxide emissions from producing methanol are also zero.
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"Abstract
The catalytic steam gasification of waste polyethylene (PE) from municipal solid waste (MSW) to produce syngas (H2 + CO) with NiO/γ-Al2O3 as catalyst in a bench-scale downstream fixed bed reactor was investigated. The influence of the reactor temperature on the gas yield, gas composition, steam decomposition, low heating value (LHV), cold gas efficiency and carbon conversion efficiency was investigated at the temperature range of 700–900 °C, with a steam to waste polyethylene ratio of 1.33. Over the ranges of experimental conditions examined, NiO/γ-Al2O3 catalyst revealed better catalytic performance as a view of increasing product gas yield and of decreasing char and liquid yields in the presence of steam. Higher temperature resulted in more H2 and CO production, higher carbon conversion efficiency and product gas yield. The highest syngas (H2 + CO) content of 64.35 mol%, the highest H2 content of 36.98 mol%, and the highest CO content of 27.37 mol%, were achieved at the highest temperature level of 900 °C. Syngas produced with a H2/CO molar ratio in the range of 0.83–1.35, was highly desirable as feedstock for Fischer–Tropsch synthesis for the production of transportation fuels."
Note the conclusion that some plastic wastes, like coal, are "highly desirable as feedstock for Fischer–Tropsch synthesis for the production of transportation fuels."
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“This means that if you used electricity from a coal-fired power plant, for every unit of electricity you used to operate the capture machine, you’d be capturing 10 times as much CO2 as the power plant emitted making that much electricity,” Keith says."
Not explained well in this particular news release is the fact that Keith's invention uses NaOH - i.e. sodium hydroxide, lye - which reacts with CO2 to yield carbonates and bicarbonates of sodium, which, in turn, have various commercial uses.
Note that Keith's invention - it is in the process of being patented - does not, as do other CO2 reclamation technologies, lead to the synthesis of additional liquid fuels and useful organic chemicals.
It does, however, enable the commercial extraction of dilute CO2 from the atmosphere in a practical process, wherein the extraction procedure itself results in the production of end use products. It is an evolution of efficiency in Carbon Dioxide recycling.
And, it thereby enables "remote" siting, or placement, of the CO2 collection facilities. Power plants and Coal-to-Liquid facilities, for instance, would not have to undergo expensive retrofitting with new carbon capture equipment - a separate facility for that purpose could be set up nearby, or even a thousand miles away, and the extracted CO2 "assigned" to a specific power generator or CTL converter as carbon credits.
