US navy chemists try to turn seawater into jet fuel
August 19th, 2009 - 12:39 pm ICT by ANILondon, August 19 (ANI): In a new experiment, US navy chemists have processed seawater into unsaturated short-chain hydrocarbons that with further refining could be made into kerosene-based jet fuel.
According to a report by New Scientist, the process involves extracting carbon dioxide (CO2) dissolved in the water and combining it with hydrogen - obtained by splitting water molecules using electricity - to make a hydrocarbon fuel.
It uses a variant of a chemical reaction called the Fischer-Tropsch process, which is used commercially to produce a gasoline-like hydrocarbon fuel from syngas, a mixture of carbon monoxide and hydrogen often derived from coal.
Robert Dorner, a Naval Research Laboratory chemist in Washington DC and first author of a new paper on the technique, said that CO2 is rarely used in the Fischer-Tropsch process because of its chemical stability.
“But CO2’s abundance, combined with concerns about global warming, make it an attractive potential feedstock,” Dorner said.
“Although the gas forms only a small proportion of air - around 0.04 per cent - ocean water contains about 140 times that concentration,” he added.
The navy team has been experimenting to find out how to steer the CO2-producing process away from producing unwanted methane to produce more of the hydrocarbons wanted.
In the conventional Fischer-Tropsch process, carbon monoxide and hydrogen are heated in the presence of a catalyst to initiate a complex chain of reactions that produce a mixture of methane, waxes and liquid fuel compounds.
Dorner and colleagues found that using the usual cobalt-based catalyst on seawater-derived CO2 produced almost entirely methane gas.
Switching to an iron catalyst resulted in only 30 per cent methane being produced, with the remainder short-chain hydrocarbons that could be refined into jet fuel.
According to Heather Willauer, the navy chemist leading the project, the efficiency needs to be much improved, perhaps by finding a different catalyst. (ANI)
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Tags: chemical reaction, chemical stability, feedstock, fischer tropsch process, fuel compounds, hydrocarbon fuel, hydrocarbons, jet fuel, laboratory chemist, liquid fuel, methane gas, naval research laboratory, navy team, new experiment, new scientist, ocean water, seawater, splitting water, using electricity, water molecules