Researchers Develop Biofuel Alternative To Ethanol 320
coondoggie writes "Researchers say they have developed a method of using bacteria to convert decaying grass directly into isobutanol, which can be burned in regular car engines with a heat value higher than ethanol but similar to gasoline. The research could mean great savings in processing costs and time, plus isobutanol is a higher grade of alcohol than ethanol, according to the Department of Energy's BioEnergy Science Center (BESC) and its Oak Ridge National Laboratory"
Finally! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Finally! (Score:4, Interesting)
The VW TDI cars are excellent cars, but Diesel is now so expensive that despite their phenomenal mileage they're still not economical. I now pay at least $0.20 more per gallon than premium unleaded around here.
Re: (Score:2)
You can make your own biodiesel with vegetable oil, sodium hydroxide and methanol. It costs about $500 to get started(that includes filters, fuel line heaters and enough sodium hydroxide and methanol to produce 200+ gallons of fuel) but once you've got everything together you produce fuel at around $1/gallon.
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Running B100 in new, non-PD (Pumpe Duse) VW TDIs is highly inadvisable. They have a whole new high pressure fuel pump and aren't designed to work with it. Warranty voidance is almost guaranteed.
Re: (Score:2)
Where do you get vegetable oil at $1 per gallon?
Re: (Score:3)
I go to chinese restaurants and get the oil from them. They typically don't use enough to need one of those dump containers and they're happy to give it to me. I only need 15 gallons per week at most so this isn't a problem.
Re: (Score:3)
I drive an old Mercedes so this isn't an issue for me. It has mechanical fuel injection(and indirect injection at that) so it doesn't have those kinds of issues. Due to the reliability of the old Mercedes diesels, I'll probably never buy another (family) car again.
Re: (Score:2)
The VW TDI cars are excellent cars
I agree. I would love to be able to afford a 2 door Golf TDI with a manual transmission, but it is way beyond my price range and they pretty well never show up on the used market. The only diesel car I can afford right now would be a 1980's Benz sedan with 20 trillion miles on it and 30 tubs of bondo holding the doors on.
What I would really like is a Smart fortwo Diesel, but of course those will almost certainly never be brought to the US.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Except that newer european diesels are notoriously unreliable (more so than european cars) after they've racked up the miles. This is mainly because shrinking diesel technology down and making it more powerful requires stronger engine parts than older, larger diesels or petrol engines. This results in a higher failure rate.
Probably fine for new vehicles, and great for fleet cars. But woe betide the second hand buyer.
Citation (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Erm, I don't know exactly what you mean by 'newer' or 'racking up the miles', but most of the taxis round here (Decayingnorthernwasteland, UK) are powered by the 1.9 TDI VW/Audi/Skoda engine ( I think it has been replaced by a 2.0 now and I have no data for the 2.0 ) and they get about 175,000 miles out of them before they need any major parts. And these are vehicles that spend almost all their time in 30 and 40mph zones with stop lights every few hundred yards.
Re: (Score:3)
Love to see the cites on this.
I own a "newer" european diesel and it is doing just fine as a gracefully ageing lady.
Diesels are pretty bombproof as long as they are maintained - I know several that are well on their way to 200k without being clapped out.
This "notorious" unreliability must be in a different Europe than the one I live in. I can't say I've ever heard anyone say that, and I'm friends with people who service cars for a living.
Re:Finally! (Score:4, Insightful)
Unless the price of diesel is damn near double that of gas, you're still coming out ahead...
Re: (Score:3)
Re:Finally! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Finally! (Score:4, Informative)
I thought the new low-sulfur fuel came due to the new particulate emissions level mandates which are part of the problem. They added a particulate filter to the exhaust that has to periodically burn up the matter collected there. Most new diesel engines (post 2007) do this by injecting fuel into the cylinder right after the cylinder fires and exhaust valve opens so that it vaporizes and travels to the exhaust where it can heat up the particulate filter and burn off the collected matter. Since bio-diesel is denser and doesn't vaporize as easily it ends up getting stuck to the piston walls and getting into the engine oil where it dilutes it and then damages the engine.
Not all new diesels have this problem, some companies decided to put an injector in the exhaust itself in order to deal with this, but most went the other route because it's cheaper so you shouldn't just assume post-2007 cars will run on even small mixtures of biodiesel anymore.
Here's a guy who had a 2009 TDI that didn't end up running so well on B100: 09 TDI [biodieselsmarter.com]
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
I just use vegetable oil from any discounter for my Smart diesel car.
You can buy bulk at any oil mill.
https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Vegetable_oil_fuel [wikimedia.org]
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
The VW TDI cars are excellent cars
Ehhhhh... Sort of. I've had a VW TDI Golf for about five years and I love the mileage I get out of it, but the electrical system is completely fucking weird. Lights come on and go off on the dash constantly, tail lights burn out repeatedly, the buzzer warning you that you've left your headlights on works about 5% of the time (leading to multiple dead batteries per year)... Despite all this I still love the car and I'll drive it until it falls apart, but I'd hardly call it
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
you're thinking of a Mitsubishi, running on anything.
Not So Fast (Score:2)
So far they only have lab experiments. Nothing is in production yet. It is quite possible that they will have a similar issue as with hydrocarbons produced by algae. When they tried to scale up to production level contaminants cause the good algae to die. Promising; yes. Production; not yet and maybe never.
Remake (Score:2)
We need a remake of "Gasoline Alley Bred":
Isobutanol Alley Bred.
It'll be another hit. I can see it now.
"Step on the iso and let's get out of here!"
ORNL (Score:2)
.
Re: (Score:2)
Exactly... how does this stuff taste I wonder?
Patents, patents, lawsuits... (Score:3, Interesting)
Perhaps (un)surprisingly BP is the plaintiff here...
http://corporate.lexisnexis.com/news/corporate-counsel,intellectual-property/cat200003_doc1373404955.html [lexisnexis.com]
Re: (Score:3)
There is not a lot of IP possible with a organism that occurs naturally, the "magic sauce" only comes into play when they try to engineer the little buggers to eat cellulose rather than starch. In the Clostridium family there are organisms the digest cellulose and organisms that metabolize starch into isobutanol, grow them together and sooner or later the little buggers are going to do the sex thing and exchange DNA amongst themselves; if your lucky you'll get a critter that does both and you've then made a
Re: (Score:2)
Gevo's organism is not natural, it is recombinant. At least according to the patent suit report linked by GP.
Recombinant is natural (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
plus isobutanol is a higher grade of alcohol than ethanol
Is it wrong, if that makes me wonder if it's drinkable?
Hot air will make baloons float too.... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Its just my electrons are created by magic elves.
Octane (Score:2)
How many lobbyists (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:How many lobbyists (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
When the day of rage comes, they will tell Big Agro and Big Oil to screw off. You can bet on that!
And they won't tell the environmental folks the same thing by letting Oil start drilling in the US again?
I agree that this may be a better solution than ethonol (What does it do to a car's engine?), but as with anything else, ONE SIZE FITS ALL doesn't work.
Re: (Score:2)
This stuff will make it out sooner than later. The oil age is going to fizzle quickly -- either through demand-driven depletion, inflationary undersupply or geopolitical instability. Replacements will be in demand and too economically competitive to get stashed away in Warehouse 13 by Big Oil, Inc.
I'll believe it when I see it. (Score:3)
The real breakthrough we need isn't growing bacterial to produce fuel. We already know how to do that quite well. The trick is scaling it up to practical volumes. Generally speaking bacterial who waste energy on producing fuel for us humans tend to be pretty fragile and finicky.
Re: (Score:2)
Damn, I guess all thouse brewer's yeasts throughout the millenia never got the memo!
Re: (Score:3)
Yeast are not bacteria, they're fungi and are more closely related to you than to any bacteria (or, for that matter, any plant.)
My understanding is that so long as there is sugar around, yeasts will metabolize it to alcohol so as to poison competitors for the food source, and later metabolize the alcohol once the sugar runs out. However, I'm not sure I got this from a reliable source, and I couldn't find confirmation in a quick web search. In any case, I think it is one of those rare evolutionary innovation
From grass? (Score:2)
Maybe i could use it to power my lawn mower.
The important question (Score:2)
Can I drink it?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Well, it's a liquid, so physically of course you can drink it.
Another fossil fuel? (Score:4, Informative)
How is this grass-based fuel any different? To make it in large quantities won't we still need fossil fuel based fertilizers and large tracts of land?
land use (Score:4, Insightful)
Hit paywall reading paper (Score:3)
This is a Government-funded paper, but it's behind a paywall. [asm.org] The price is $20.
There are lots of biotech schemes for digesting cellulose into something more useful, but so far, none of them are cheap enough.
You can get the research paper here (Score:3, Informative)
Engineering Corynebacterium glutamicum for isobutanol production [nih.gov]
or pdf download:
doi:10.1007/s00253-010-2522-6 [doi.org]
Biofuel Dangers (Score:4, Interesting)
If this grass or process can benefit from using arable land and irrigation, then please no.
The biofuel thing has always mystified me. If there are two things in the world that are more scarce and fundamental to life than oil, they've got to be arable land and irrigation water. The corn ethanol thing caused all sorts of havoc in farming and food pricing, particularly with international farmers destroying staple food crops to grow fuel plants and selling corn to oil producers instead of families. This is not the way of the future.
If this grass can grow in otherwise unusable land, and it can grow without diverting otherwise useful drinking or irrigation water, then fine. I'm very skeptical that even if that is technically possible that it will play out as such once the prices come in and farmers have to choose between taking money from poor hungry people or rich gas guzzlers.
Can we just abstract the whole fuel source thing and skip to all-electrics like the Tesla and power them with... nuclear? solar? hydroelectric? wind? geothermal? hamsters?
Cheers
Re:Biofuel Dangers (Score:5, Interesting)
Additionally, most grasses that would be used as feedstocks, such as switchgrass, are perennial plants. According to Wikipedia:
"The main agronomic advantages of switchgrass as a bioenergy crop are its stand longevity, drought and flooding tolerance, relatively low herbicide and fertilizer input requirements, ease of management, hardiness in poor soil and climate conditions, and widespread adaptability in temperate climates." In other words, switchgrass will be a viable crop in many areas that aren't suitable for food anyway."
Distillation? (Score:3, Interesting)
Isobutanol is not very soluble in water (87 g/L) - I wonder if this process also avoids the need for distillation? Distillation is the most energy-intensive part of bio-ethanol production.
If it doesn't separate, distillation will really suck, since it's boiling point (107.89 C) is higher than water.
Biodiesel an energy *carrier* not an energy source (Score:3)
Biodiesel is essentially harvested solar energy, packaged in chemical form, with an efficiency that is probably comparable to solar panels. Worse, sunlight and resources devoted to growing grass is sunlight and resources not growing food. We can, and will, grow some of our fuel, but at nowhere near the scale, nor at the same energy return, as oil.
Biofuel is one answer, but it's a small one-word, vaguely apologetic answer lost in the din. You want to generate energy? Think "nuclear."
A.B.E. process...butanol (Score:3)
The A.B.E. process has been around for a while, producing acetone, butanol and ethanol via bacteria. I seem to recall some improvements on the process which create an end product which is entirely butanol. Why is isobutanol better than butanol?
Re:I have seen that work (Score:4, Informative)
Warning: that link is goatse
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Goatse can kill a car engine even faster than isobutanol!
Re: (Score:2)
Gas is actually gasoline. People will end up calling it iso or something.
Re:Its not called gas but its called... (Score:5, Interesting)
grassoline sounds pretty snappy
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Gives a whole new meaning to the "Gas, Ass or Grass" bumper stickers
Re: (Score:2)
true, but that complicates the expression "gas, grass, or ass... no one rides for free".
My first thought as well. Still, "Grassoline" is a pretty funny word...
Re:Its not called gas but its called... (Score:4, Funny)
Just wait till they make fuel from fermented human waste. Assoline will confuse matters even more.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Actually, I just did a little research and discovered that "petrol" is not short for petroleum. It is actually short for St. Peter's oil and originated as the trade name for gasoline by the British wholesaler Carless, Capel and Leonard (their c
Re: (Score:3)
Well, I sure hope all this takes place LONG after I'm old and dead. I happen to love driving my cars and motorcycles. Firing it up, cranking on the tunes and putting the hammer down on the road.
Re: (Score:3)
Cheers
JE
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
If plants are eating grass then I think we should probably look into that problem instead.
Re:Its not called gas but its called... (Score:5, Informative)
I support growing more grass even if we use it as fuel.
Re: (Score:2)
weed? i hear cars can fly on it.
Re: (Score:3)
I hear hemp is a very good biofuel crop, for all kinds of reasons. Fast growing, easy to process, not too fussy about where it's grown. Its reputation as a narcotic works against it, but the kind of hemp you'd grow for biofuel would be an extremely weak drug.
But by the same token, I'm never sure whether its proponents are just keen on it for druggy reasons.
Re:Its not called gas but its called... (Score:4, Interesting)
Corn does make livestock sick. If you feed a cow nothing but corn, they get overgrowths of bacteria in their rumen, produce excessive gas, and can suffer from stomach and intestinal ruptures. This is a large part of the reason why 80% of antibiotics used in the USA are fed to farm animals as prophylaxis, in an attempt to prevent stomach ruptures and feedlot deaths. You're correct, though, that the sick livestock cost ranchers. They just don't see any (fast, easy) way out of the feedlot model. The feedlot cows are ALL sick, but just healthy enough to walk from truck to slaughterhouse. That's close to all the USDA requires.
Re: (Score:3)
Silage is fed primarily to dairy animals and at cow-calf operations for exactly that reason. CAFOs to my limited knowledge feed primarily straight grain blends, with a heavy emphasis on corn, and just enough roughage to help keep the fermentation down. Silage is expensive to transport. Grain is energy dense.
Re:Its not called gas but its called... (Score:5, Interesting)
Whereas right now, corn productions is managed efficiently, and the starving people all get food... right.
Starvation is mostly a logistics and political problem. Low-grade corn is cheap near where it's produced, but that's generally not where people are starving. Moving the food to the people costs money, which raises the final cost beyond what the people can afford. A government could subsidize that cost, but that kind of action is often systematically abused and easily spun by political opponents as "propping up those greedy transport companies".
Basic economic analysis tells us that with starving people needing food, but only being able to pay a lower amount for it, a smart distribution company will simply ignore those people in favor of markets that will turn a profit. The simplest solution is to make starving areas profitable, either with a subsidy or by lowering the cost of transport.
Re:Its not called gas but its called... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3)
Lets get real here about this whole starving people issue.
If we are talking about starving people in this country they should migrate. If you are someplace were you can't provide for yourself in the states you should leave that place, even if you have to walk. Its entirely possible to do that here. I am not saying its at all easy for some, but I really do think if you starve to death in the USA its partially because you allowed it to happen. There are enough programs, shelters, odd jobs, etc around that
Re: (Score:3)
Soylent Green?
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
"We" aren't doing anything. I'm using my grass to create food, and fuel, and whatever else I need. You can use your grass however you want.
Re: (Score:2)
"We" aren't doing anything. I'm using my grass to create food, and fuel, and whatever else I need. You can use your grass however you want.
Really you eat your grass??
I Prefer to Smoke It
Re:Its not called gas but its called... (Score:5, Insightful)
That's why it's an advance if we can create it from cellulose. It's not like we couldn't synthesize isobutanol from plants before. Making fuel out of sugar is no big secret. What's new is that this time, it's from parts we can't eat. It's not perfect, but it's an advance.
Re: (Score:3)
I know I will be grilled for writing this, but has it never occurred to you that it may not be such a good idea to send all that food to those starving people in the first place? The hunger in Africa and other places is, in my humble opinion, not caused by a shortage of food but by an overabundance of people (relative to the resources available there). Many African countries have annual population growth rates between 3 and 4%. Hell, even with the US population almost stagnating at less than 1% and European
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
You won't ever buy it. The companies refining the oil will. It will be blended with gasoline like MTB and ethanol to meet legislated requirements for oxygen in the gasoline. There is a bunch of reasons the oxygen is needed. Google them if you really need to know. Hopefully it means a price reduction at the pumps eventually if is actually cheaper in the end. Or at least the gas will go farther from a higher energy content.
We got your goatse upthread (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Peoples still seem not to get it (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Gevo has been developing their own fermentation technology for over 8 years, until a patent issued to a JV between BP and Dupont on Dec 2010 is suddenly seeing Gevo in court [cleantechies.com]
If IP battles are going to go on in such a raging manner it will be decades before we (as consumers) see anything useful come out of these technologies.
And we all know where things are heading [nationalgeographic.com] while we linger...
Decades, you say? (Score:2)
If IP battles are going to go on in such a raging manner it will be decades before we (as consumers) see anything useful come out of these technologies.
Hmm... The plaintiffs are BP and DuPont. Do you think that "decades" might be the whole point?
Re:Call me when it's on shelves. (Score:5, Insightful)
Ethanol fuel in the US is a subsidy for corn growers, plain and simple. Any effect is has on the fuel supply is a distant afterthought. Therefore, any alternative to ethanol that isn't made from corn, corn, and only corn completely misses the point and won't get any national attention. I tell you, the first and most important step in balancing the US budget is to move the first few. most inluential, presidential primaries to states that don't grow corn!
Re:Call me when it's on shelves. (Score:4, Insightful)
Hold them all on the same day. Then you get it out of the way immediately without all the stupidity of a state with less than 1% of the population weeding out candidates before others get to vote on them. This makes it the perfect time to get in alternate voting methods as well to bring about a likelihood that someone will get a majority vote.
Re:Call me when it's on shelves. (Score:4, Interesting)
Apparently it's already in your grass clipplings, so all you need to do is;
1 separate out the C. cellulolyticum H10
2 culture and grow an inoculating culture
3 sterilize you grass clippling
4 inoculate with you C. cellulyticum and ferment
5 profit
Re:Call me when it's on shelves. (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:3)
isobutanol from cellulose is not a tiny improvement over isobutanol from sugars. It is a huge one.
You do realize that cellulose is waste, while sugar is not only food but harder to produce in quantity, right? That we could use the leftover inedible parts of processed crops from the factory refuse piles to make the fuel?
The real question is how much preprocessing of the feedstock they have actually managed to do away with.
Re: (Score:2)
Its nice, yea, but really, the only way to save our butt from peak oil/global warming is to decrease energy consumption dramaticaly.
Like live next to work, use bicycles, etc...
There are many who have no vision. I suggest that you read Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions [google.com]. The western world has a tendency to have entire industries disappear when new technology comes along.
There are a number of significant innovations under development that will make the oil industry (as we know it) obsolete.
I personally am expecting a Tesla-powered [evworld.com] car:
Re: (Score:2)
Like live next to work, use bicycles, etc.
People keep saying this like it is a practical alternative. Everybody just waves a magic wand and <poof> our energy use drops. Basically, that's an idea that is already OBE and isn't going to happen on any large scale in the next few decades. For example, Atlanta is a big example of urban sprawl, with close to six million people in the metro area. How many trillions of dollars would have to be spent to somehow redesign/rebuild/relocate the city and its populace?
Re: (Score:2)
"Can you write code with no bugs the first time?"
Not likely when you dont yet fully understand the programming language.
Re:Sorry, but.... (Score:4, Informative)
First butanol isn't particularly water soluble, 87 g/L at 20 C and its density is 0.802 g/cm3, so it floats on top of the water
Re: (Score:2)
The abstract for the paper says that the researchers "have demonstrated the first isobutanol production to approximately 660 mg/L from crystalline cellulose using this microorganism." Based on that density, it may be easy to essentially skim it from the top of the production container.
I've been looking around to understand the context of that. The best I can come up with is that it's producing 660mg of isobutanol per liter of solution, which I judge to be about 0.82mL. Unfortunately, that doesn't tell us
Re: (Score:2)
Theoretically it goes down about 10%, so in the real world I'd expect 15-20% if you didn't re-chip the computer. Octane rating is a little less so don't stand on the throttle or you might get engine ping which is hard on the engine.