Sweet diesel! Scientists have discovered a process to convert sugar
directly into renewable diesel that could replace fossil fuels used in
vehicles. University of California, Berkeley scientists found that a long-abandoned fermentation
process once used to turn starch into explosives can be used to produce
renewable diesel.
Researchers teamed up to produce diesel fuel from the products of a
bacterial fermentation discovered nearly 100 years ago by the first president
of Israel, chemist Chaim Weizmann. The retooled process produces a mix of
products that contain more energy per gallon than ethanol that is used today in
transportation fuels and could be commercialized within 5-10 years.
While the fuel's cost is still higher than diesel or gasoline made from
fossil fuels, scientists said the process would drastically reduce greenhouse
gas emissions from transportation, one of the major contributors to global
climate change. "What I am really excited about is that this is a
fundamentally different way of taking feed-stocks — sugar or starch — and
making all sorts of renewable things, from fuels to commodity chemicals like
plastics," said Dean Toste, professor of chemistry and co-author in a
statement. The late Weizmann's process employs the bacterium Clostridium
acetobutylicum to ferment sugars into acetone, butanol and ethanol.
Researchers developed a way of extracting the acetone and butanol from
the fermentation mixture while leaving most of the ethanol behind, while
developing a catalyst that converted this ideally-proportioned brew into a mix
of long-chain hydrocarbons that resembles the combination of hydrocarbons in
diesel fuel. Tests showed that it burned about as well as normal
petroleum-based diesel fuel. "It looks very compatible with diesel, and
can be blended like diesel to suit summer or winter driving conditions in
different states," said coauthor Harvey Blanch. The process is versatile
enough to use a broad range of renewable starting materials, from corn sugar
(glucose) and cane sugar (sucrose) to starch, and would work with non-food
feed-stocks such as grass, trees or field waste in cellulosic processes.
Source: Times of India
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It is amazing to hear that technologies are now using the technique of converting sugars into fuel that can be useful for us. Because all we know that sugar is only used as sweetening agent. By these projects it can promote the new use of sugar and turning it to be a more useful one..
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