Nanotechnology makes biofuel development a cost-effective and ‘green’ process
October 9th, 2009 - 2:34 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )Washington, October 9 (ANI): Researchers at Louisiana Tech University in the US have come out with nanotechnology processes that can make the development of biofuels cost-effective and also easy on the environment.
Biofuels will play an important part in sustainable fuel and energy production solutions for the future.
A country’s appetite for fuel, however, cannot be satisfied with traditional crops such as sugar cane or corn alone.
Emerging technologies are allowing cellulosic biomass (wood, grass, stalks) to also be converted into ethanol.
Cellulosic ethanol does not compete with food production and has the potential to decrease greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 86 percent over that of today’s fossil fuels.
Current techniques for corn ethanol only reduce greenhouse gases by 19 percent.
The nanotechnology processes developed at Louisiana Tech University can immobilize the expensive enzymes used to convert cellulose to sugars, allowing them to be reused several times over and, thus significantly reducing the overall cost of the process.
Savings estimates range from approximately 32 million dollars for each cellulosic ethanol plant to a total of 7.5 billion dollars if a federally-established goal of 16 billion gallons of cellulosic ethanol is achieved.
This process can easily be applied in large-scale commercial environments and can immobilize a wide variety or mixture of enzymes for production. (ANI)
- Orange peels and newspapers may lead to cheaper and cleaner fuel - Feb 19, 2010
- UK company claims it can 'grow diesel' - Mar 01, 2011
- Scientists say growing grain for food, not fuel, more energy efficient - Apr 20, 2010
- Modified yeast could lead to more efficient, economical biofuel production - Aug 20, 2010
- US to invest $510 mn in advanced biofuels - Aug 17, 2011
- Using cellulosic ethanol in vehicles may benefit human health and environment - Feb 03, 2009
- Indian-origin scientist unveils new, efficient technique of biofuel production - Jul 01, 2010
- Engineered bacteria to turn carbon dioxide into liquid fuel - Dec 11, 2009
- Scientists develop eco-friendly alternatives for petrochemical fuels - Jun 20, 2009
- Tweaked E coli can produce low-cost fuel - Jan 28, 2010
- Engineers develop new eco-friendly process to produce jet fuel - Feb 26, 2010
- Scientists develop microbe that produces fuels directly from biomass - Jan 28, 2010
- New yeast strain 'cuts major drawbacks of biofuel production methods' - Dec 28, 2010
- Plant and forestry waste might replace a third of gasoline use by 2030 - Feb 11, 2009
- New tech zaps trash mounds into fistfuls of ash - Nov 16, 2011
Tags: appetite, billion dollars, cellulose, cellulosic ethanol plant, commercial environments, corn ethanol, emerging technologies, emissions, energy production, enzymes, food production, fossil fuels, greenhouse gas, greenhouse gases, louisiana tech university, million dollars, production solutions, stalks, sugar cane, traditional crops