Power Plant Converts Fruit and Veggie Waste Into Natural Gas For Cars 118
Zothecula writes "Some readers might remember the Mr. Fusion unit in Back to the Future that Doc Brown fills with household garbage, including a banana peel and some beer, to power the iconic time-traveling DeLorean. While we're still some way from such direct means of running our cars on table scraps, researchers at Fraunhofer have developed a pilot plant that ferments the waste from wholesale fruit and veg markets, cafeterias and canteens to make methane, which can be used to power vehicles."
Good idea, expand it to cover more fule sources. (Score:4, Insightful)
Expand it to cover more fuel sources. (Score:5, Insightful)
The Parent post everstates the case, a lot of imperfect produce becomes tomato sauce, potato flakes, strawberry puree, applesauce, carrot juice, etc.
There is a lot of agricultural waste, some scratch and dent from retail, and a LOT of uneaten or wasted food from restaurants.
I expect there are some enzyme or bacteria treatments that can cause this mash to release more starches or sugars before the fermentation phase begins.
Re:Expand it to cover more fuel sources. (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't know how common it is, but a lot of the produce that isn't sold in my local market is donated to local animal shelters. And yes, many consumers prefer the artificially colored/waxed/preserved stuff that is so much prettier than the rest, but I can't believe there's anything like 40% "waste".
Re:Expand it to cover more fuel sources. (Score:5, Informative)
I live in the middle of an agriINDUSTRY area. Most of the agricultural waste is left to rot in the fields. To bring it to some place where it could be processed into fuel would consume fuel. Further, much of this waste is recycled into the soil by insects, worms, fungi and bacteria to become fertilizer for the next crop (lest the soil become exhausted.)
It's a neat idea, but you can use any hydrocarbon waste for this process - cardboard, paper or wood scraps.
What about home plant waste material? (Score:2)
I got a Breville Ikon juicer and it works wonders...but I'd been trying to think what to do with all the dry pulp that comes out of it.
I'd been thinking to try to save some of it, particularly the veggie stuff from the green juices...and maybe boiling it to make vegetable stock....I don't know anything about composting, but was thinking to research and explore t
Re: (Score:3)
Simplest thing to do: put the pulp back into the juice. Alternatively, let it compost. Takes about a year to fully compost, but as long as you make sure to ONLY put organic (or at least thoroughly washed) produce into compost, you get some excellent soil back.
Re: (Score:2)
Well, I was on a 30 day juice fast...only juice, no pulp.
Going forward, I eat (sensibly now), and I like smoothies, but I also like to juice, without the pulp, I can squeeze even more veggie/fruit micro nutrients into my diet, that I could not do eating all of them...this is in addition to normal eating of veggies and fruits too whole or blended.
Re: (Score:3)
It's absolutely possible to compost it. You can even compost things like coffee grounds (with the paper filter if you use one) and tea bags. Pretty much any solid vegetable matter, really (including breads/cereals). The only thing I'd hesitate to compost is tomatoes, unless you *really* want a lot of tomato plants in your garden (also, you increase the risk of introducing some tomato plant viruses into your soil).
Re: (Score:2)
Are there any good DIY posts ya'll know of on how to do it, or build whatever apparatus you might need?
I see one person responded with something to do with a worm farm...not sure if that was joking or not, but not so much wanting to raise worms, but just something to make soil to use as fertilizer, which is what I guess composting is....
Re: (Score:2)
Composting is one of the easiest things to do. Problem is space.
here is a link http://www.doityourself.com/stry/h2composting [doityourself.com]
easiest way to start ...
with your garden, pick out a spot in the back not to visible, where you don't get good production of your fruits and veggies.
get some chicken wire ( about 6 linear feet ) make it into a tube and stake it into the ground
load a ton of leaves ( half way up ), add about 4 inches of dirt and then top off with more leaves, wait a week and add more dirt
in about 1 month
Re: (Score:2)
Nice description! I think most people should just avoid composting meat and dairy entirely, though... as you said, you can get rodent problems (around here, rats are more common than raccoons, and they can easily dig through 3' of compost :) It can also smell *awful*, almost like... rotting meat ;)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
For convenient hot composting, you could use an indoor electric composter. It does need some care and feeding though.
Re: (Score:2)
Worm box!
http://www.wikihow.com/Make-Your-Own-Worm-Compost-System [wikihow.com]
Don't let it ferment, the worms get drunk and come out of the box looking for trouble. You don't want that, trust me.
Re: (Score:2)
Actually, I do have a Vitamix too....once I got off the juice only fast, I've gone back to using it for smoothies and soups...and soon, to start experimenting with grinding my own whole wheat flour from wheat berries into bread...
But like I stated above...the juicer still has a place in my daily diet...I can eat whole foods from Vitamix or regular cooking...but with the juicer, I can increase my intake even more of the mic
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Expand it to cover more fuel sources. (Score:5, Informative)
Actually high cellulose content products don't work much at all. You need a high nitrogen content material (poop is the preferred material, ideally bird stuff because it contains the urine as well). There is a particular ratio of carbon to nitrogen that works best and by using various combinations of poop and different vegetable matter you get a mixture that gives the most methane and the least CO2. Vegetable leaf matter by itself will work, slowly, but produces a much higher CO2 to methane ratio so is not very useful for combustion. I assume that actual fruit and vegatables have higher nitrogen content than the leaves.
I built a few methane digesters in the 70's and I can tell you that it's not as easy as it sounds to actually produce useful amounts of methane. There is a lot of continuous mixing that has to happen or thick viscous mats form and keep things from working right. This consumes energy. You also can't really compress methane much without using more energy to compress it than you get out of it.
Of course if it's armageddon and you have lots of pig poop & crazy midgets to run things, this could actually work.
Re: (Score:2)
At the industrial scale these problems can be conquered with modern technology. Cellulosic ethanol is readily achievable, far more efficiently than (for example) nuclear fission, and what's left over from that process can be made into methane or plastics.
At the home scale, though, you're right. Until the patents wear out on the microbes, biodigestion of cellulose is corporate territory.
Re: (Score:3)
Dr. Diesel invented his engine so that it could be fueled by the crops it tended. The first demonstration engine ran on peanut oil. Fueling your vehicles is a marginal overhead cost when you're generating vehicle fuel.
And if it's all carbon neutral who cares?
Re: (Score:2)
These are wild animals, not typical adoption shelters. You can toss a hungry bear pretty much anything and be assured that he'll eat it.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Our dogs _love_ green beans - so much that you can't even say the word 'green' without them jumping up and down with excitement. They get them on their kibble every night. They also adore carrots - can't say that word around them, either.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Re:Good idea, expand it to cover more fule sources (Score:4, Interesting)
Does it rot in the field, providing fertilizer for the next generation of crops and thus reducing the overall costs due to the fact so much artificial fertilizer doesn't need to be used? It isn't waste if it is actually being used for something.
Yes. The stalks, top leafs, roots, unripe or spoiled produce becomes food for the next crop, usually some other crop in a rotation. There's a lot of science behind this, too, as some crops enrich the soil, f'risnstance with Nitrogen, for the next crop which is more dependent upon it (usually something leafy) as an example.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Re:Good idea, expand it to cover more fule sources (Score:5, Informative)
Unfortunately the chemicals that industrial agriculture uses interferes with the nutrient cycle that you're thinking of. Because everything other than the plant of interest is treated as something to be killed off with insecticides, fungicides, etc., the soil microbes are killed off, and the survivors are in an imbalanced ecological state which means that they're more likely to act in ways not helpful to the crop. It all leads back to dependency on oil-based fertilizers and pesticides while the soil is little more than a medium to hold the plant upright.
Otherwise, your solution would fit right in.
Re: (Score:2)
Nice, general statement, unsupported by fact. Your post reflect old techniques, not modern farming.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
There's a book from 1980 called "The Mother Earth News Handbook of Homemade Power" that goes into it (and other 'green' technologies that work well on small scales) that goes into greater detail. You can find it for 4-5 bucks on bookfinder.com
Re: (Score:2)
There's plenty of waste at every stage of production. Just look through a grocery store's dumpster or compactor some time. You'll be amazed at what goes in there.
Re: (Score:3)
the US consumer wont buy imperfect produce
Judging by my experience in the USA, this is categorically untrue. US consumers will happily tolerate vegetables that taste of (slightly) crunchy water. What they won't buy is vegetables that look imperfect. Imperfections in the taste and texture are fine.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah its the American's fault, people in Europe love mishapen brown fruit.
Walk around a French market. Walk around an American market. You will notice that, in comparison with their French counterparts, the American fruit and vegetables are:
The same is true in much of Europe, although in the UK we tend further in the American direction than most of the rest of Europe (more true in supermarkets than markets).
better use (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Rather than using the methane in cars would be to run it directly into an electrical generation plant. More efficient. Local landfills are collecting the methane, one is uses it to power generators and the other uses the methane to heat city schools.
A friend of mine has designed landfills for Natural Gas production and recovery -- peak production in 50 years, with a life span of about 100 years. Not huge amounts, but as you say, sufficient for a small community or a local industrial park is possible with the proper planning.
Much more of this can be done, if people would get their community leaders to plan how waste is processed and disposed of, rather than the out-of-sight-out-of-mind most people adopt.
Re: (Score:2)
I've seen a number of projects like this.
I've seen one landfill with a couple of 1 MW generators selling electricity to the grid. Another, sells the gas to the nearby village for use for heating the community centre.
Most recently, I've seen one where the landfill gas is captured and used to fuel the garbage trucks. (Diesel/CNG dual fuel).
Who runs Bartertown? (Score:2)
Master Blaster
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
To be fair I think it was Blaster that was doing the posting this morning.
Ton of food = 1 glass of fuel (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Fermentation process supplied from wasted goods (Score:3)
Fermentation is a very passive process as far as the plant is concerned. Very little extra energy is introduced into the system. Once the energy is exttracted the leftovers can probably be used as a livestock feed like many distilleries do with their dried mash.
Plus were also looking at a source material feedstock if you will that comes from waste that already exists, not Corn and Sugar Cane that would otherwise be feeding people and keeping the prices of those goods at a reasonable level.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
I'm sure the power plant requires fuel to process the food, so is it realy practical? Besides, how is this any better than using Corn or Suger Cain for fuel, that's already being done.
Better idea is to use ALL of the GMO Corn and Soybeans for fuel until it's used up, so people and animals won't have to eat food that makes them sick. By the time the GMO crops are gone, we'll have enough honeybees to fertilize the crops.
Ton of waste = many gallons of fuel (Score:2)
All energy producing industries consume energy. Coal and uranium don't mine themselves, gas doesn't pump itself through the pipeline and purify itself. Electrical generators not only use electricity to energize the generator windings, but also electricity loses energy by heating the transmission wires whenever you move it around. Don't even get me started about battery losses.
The trick is to get more energy out than you
Re: (Score:2)
Because the corn input is valuable, having alternate uses, and costs money. Waste is... Waste. It's a problem and people pay you to take it away.
Great idea (Score:1)
Great idea, maybe we should expand this.
Lets pile all our waste in a big pile, or dig a hole and "fill the land", a "landfill" if you will.
We should seal it so it doesn't contaminate groundwater of course.
Then as it ferments and releases methane we could install a venting system and collect or use all that methane for years!
Oh wait, they've been doing this for decades.
Great (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
My Preference (Score:4, Funny)
My preference is to consume the fermented fruit matter prior to the generation of methane.
Land fill methane (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Methane gas is recovered from many land fill sites. Nothing new to see here, please move along.
I suppose you're right. And I don't know much about such things, but at various landfill sites I've seen this methane being burned off -- a big 'ol stack with a big flame, just like a monster-sized candle. What is it about the methane coming from landfill sites which prevents it being used for generating electricity? Politics or science?
Re: (Score:2)
What is it about the methane coming from landfill sites which prevents it being used for generating electricity? Politics or science?
Economics. It's just not worthwhile.
Re: (Score:2)
At the site closest to me, it doesn't appear to be either collected or burned off, but just released into the air. And I seem to remember it's not the methane that smells bad, it's the other gasses produced (ketones? I don't remember anymore) but it sure do stink.
I haven't lived in the SF Bay Area in many years -- does the ground at that outdoor arena in Mountain View still spontaneously burst into flame?
Re: (Score:2)
Well the Microsoft campus nearby does:
http://youtu.be/3W9JziTvsgA [youtu.be]
Re: (Score:3)
Economics driven by politics.
It takes an imperial arse-load of money to convert a landfill into a power plant. It'll be more profitable to use that money to build a coal-fired plant, since you can entirely ignore any negative social consequences (such as dwindling fertility and rising cancer rates). It's cheaper to pollute... because of politics. We don't charge polluters f
Woops, used an obsolete unit (Score:2)
Sorry, in European units that would be a metric fuck-tonne of money. For Americans, a standa
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, it's not excatly cutting edge research, even rural Indians have been using it for decades.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zjFybVIggDs [youtube.com]
Finally... (Score:1)
I can do something with my dinner-smuggled hoard of kale and okra.
Re: (Score:2)
Good points. Further, look at the picture in TFA. Even though it's a prototype, you can see the scale of processes needed to create the methane. To create not a whole lot of methane. This isn't going to help anyone person or any one society move off of high cost fossil fuels.
Sounds like a fun project in industrial control, but that's about it.
Double your fun if you can get a grant or two.
Wave of the future (Score:2)
I believe this will really take off when they start genetically engineering bacteria to be efficient fuel producers. I believe that bacteria engineered to produce hydro-carbon fuel will be the power source of the future.
Nerd Card Revoked (Score:3)
... Doc Brown fills with household garbage, including a banana peel and some beer, to power the iconic time-traveling DeLorean. While we're still some way from such direct means of running our cars on table scraps...
The Mr. Fusion only powered the Flux Capacitor not the DeLorean. The DeLorean still ran on gasoline and is why Marty gets stuck back in 1885 when the arrow pierces the gas tank.
Re: (Score:2)
You raise an interesting point. With 1.21 gigawatts on tap, why didn't Doc Brown put in an electric drive?
Re: (Score:2)
I'm pretty sure the 1.21 GW is only needed over a brief pulse, not longer than the duration of a lightning stroke. The 1.21 GW certainly isn't available for use continuously.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Nerd Card Revoked (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
There's a picture on one of the archery discussion sites of an arrow from a target bow piercing the door of an SUV.
Native Americans bow draw weights were typically much greater than is typical today (~80 pounds) and iron or steel trade points had pretty much completely replaced stone and rawhide points w/ any group which had contact w/ European traders long before the late 1800s.
But, if memory serves the fuel tank was down between the arms of the frame?
Ah, here we are:
http://www.lotusespritworld.com/images/ [lotusespritworld.com]
Re: (Score:2)
MythBusters?
I may be a little bit dense... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
right.. (Score:2)
because the volume of methane from vegetable waste will make a huge difference on our dependence on foreign oil.
UGH! Wrong Direction! (Score:1)
Re: (Score:3)
Your use of PERIOD makes your argument that much more persuasive. Why should we stop biofuel research? Because you said so. PERIOD.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:UGH! Wrong Direction! (Score:4, Informative)
Carbon from renewable sources moves in a cycle. The carbon dioxide that is released by burning plants is absorbed by growing plants. Carbon, being an element, can't be created or destroyed except in nuclear reactions (something plants aren't capable of doing), so there can be no net carbon release from renewable processes. The reason why fossil fuels contribute to carbon dioxide release is because fossil fuels represent stored carbon over millions of years, from an epoch when carbon dioxide was more prevalent in our atmosphere.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Burning stuff produces most energy at least cost, huh? Me thinks someone needs to go back to school:
From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internal_combustion_engine#Measures_of_engine_performance [wikipedia.org]
"Most steel engines have a thermodynamic limit of 37%. Even when aided with turbochargers and stock efficiency aids, most engines retain an average efficiency of about 18%-20%.[11] Rocket engine efficiencies are better still, up to 70%, because they operate at very high temperatures and pressures and can have very hig
Whats old is new -Gasification (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biomass_gasification [wikipedia.org]
There was just recently a show that talked about this, which were common back in the day. They used to be used on tractors & old auto mobiles. By burning wood ( or anything combustible) they can produce a diesel alternative.
I can't be more specific because I'm not really knowledgable of how it works, other then the "no shit you can do that" moment watching the host on the tv run a generator from burnt trash / wood.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biomass_gas [wikipedia.org]
No thanks... (Score:1)
"Fraunhofer"
There ended my interest in the process... the Fraunhofer Gestapo will be checking to see if your using approved waste....NO THANKS!
Their antics over MP3 is absolute BS.. NO I do NOT recoginize IP, trademark, license, copyright, or any other of that BS. Its just another reason why I won't travel to Germany again. Would love to go stand at the Brandenburg Gate and compare it to when I was there last and AK47 wielding soliders were poised on top, and would love to get Diebels Alt direct from the b
One notable difference... (Score:2)
There's one major difference, which I'm surprised that I have to point out to a slashdot audience: fusion releases a whole lot more energy than decomposition and burning. Like, orders of magnitude. So to compare this to the Mr. Fusion unit in BTTF is quite misleading. It may seem odd to use a car analogy in a story about cars, but I'm going to take a stab at it. This is like rolling a log down a hill and claiming that you've invented the Ferrari. :)
Date of release? (Score:1)
Already done on a large scale (Score:3)
Where I live (Stockholm, Sweden), there are many households that have done this for years and the amount is growing.
Households throw their food waste in special paper bags and put in separate bins. The contents of these are then collected and processed into methane at a factory.
The incentive for housing cooperatives and households to join the program is that collection of food waste is free while collection of ordinary garbage is not. There should be less amount of normal garbage and thus the cooperation's garbage costs would be reduced.
Why methane? (Score:2)
if it's just fruit and vegetables, I wonder if distilling them for ethanol could be more efficient than rotting them for methane.
Yawn..... (Score:2)
http://www.axpo-kompogas.ch/index.php?path=home&lang=en [axpo-kompogas.ch]