Title: Biofuels
1Biofuels
Bioethanol, Biodiesel, Biohydrogen, Biogas and
Biomethanol.
2The problem of finite, polluting fossil-fuels
- The stocks of oil and coal are uneven in
distribution and are being rapidly depleted- it
has been estimated that oil supplies will only
last until 2080. - Oil/coal are Non-renewable fossil fuels causing
carbon depletion, global warming - Oil/coal are also polluting during combustion
SOx, NOx
Alternative sources of fuel are urgently required!
3Global warming is our warning!
4Biofuels combustion, pyrolysis
The direct combustion of biomass in the form of
wood has been with us for thousands of years as a
source of heat. Some 90 of the biomass energy is
held in trees timber is used not only for energy
but also for a number of other industries- The
trees are not being replaced at the same rate as
they are being harvested so that the resource is
being depleted and carbon dioxide added to the
atmosphere. Pyrolysis is the heating of the
biomass in the absence of air at temperatures of
300-500C. The solids which remain are charcoal,
and the volatiles if they are collected can be
used as fuel oil (bio-oil).
5Biofuels Gasification,
- Gasification is a process where the biomass
ferments anaerobically (methanogens predominate)
to produce a biogas of 50-75 methane, carbon
dioxide, hydrogen suphide, and hydrogen. It
contains sufficient energy (20-25 MJ/kg) to be
used as a fuel in boilers and dual-fuel engines
and can be used to generate electricity. - Landfill sites when capped can produce methane,
which can be collected if pipes or channels are
incorporated into the construction. Small
anaerobic digesters have been installed on farms.
A number of industrial wastes are treated
anaerobically and the biogas used to run the
pumps and heaters. Also on-site treatment of
waste and the production of low-pressure gas for
domestic use (China and India).
6(No Transcript)
7Syngas, methane, methanol and hydrogen
- Under some conditions gasification can produce
synthesis gas (syngas), which is a mixture of
methane and hydrogen. The methane can be
converted (catalyst at 900C) to carbon monoxide
and hydrogen. - A further reaction with water converts any excess
carbon monoxide to carbon dioxide, which can be
removed by a solvent process or pressure-swing
adsorption. The remaining mixture of carbon
monoxide and hydrogen can be either converted to
methanol by reaction over a catalyst at 450C or
if hydrogen is required the two gases can be
separated (Larson et al., 1996).
8Bio-hydrogen
- Hydrogen production is triggered in
cyanobacterium Anabena cylindrica by anaerobic
conditions, which induces the reversible
hydrogenase. The hydrogenase is inhibited by
oxygen so physical separation occurs with the
photosynthetic vegetative cells generating oxygen
and heterocysts producing hydrogen. - Bacterial production of hydrogen can occur with
photosynthetic bacteria such as Rhodospirillum
rubrum and Rhodobacter sphaeroides and
Clostridium bifermentans, under anaerobic
conditions. (Wang et al., 2003).
9Biodiesel
- Transport and industry is widely used to power
tractors, pumps, and generators. The engine
designed by Diesel (1893) and the patent proposed
that the fuel could be powdered coal, groundnut
oil, castor oil, or a petroleum-based fuel (Shay,
1993 Machacon et al., 2001). At the time the
growing petrochemical industry provided the best
fuel, a crude oil fraction now called diesel.. - Conventional diesel produced by the distillation
of crude oil collecting middle distillate
fractions in the range of 175-370C. The fuel
contains hydrocarbons, naphthenes, olefins, and
aromatics.
10Bio-oil
- Plant-derived oils have been used to replace
diesel in emergency situations but a renewal of
interest on using oils as a renewable and
carbon-neutral replacement for diesel. - Plant oils are normally extracted from
oil-containing seeds-soybean, sunflower, rapeseed
and oil palm and these can be grown in most
climates and locations. - A number of algae are capable of producing
terpenoid oils, one of which is Botrycoccus
braunii which can accumulate up to 86 dry weight
as oil (Calvin, 1985).
11Transesterification to Biodiesel
- These oils need to be treated further to be used
in combustion (reduce viscosty, increase octane
rating and reduce waxes) by - Blending or pyrolysis or cracking OR
- Transesterification-treat the oil with methanol
or ethanol in acid or alkaline conditions. The
methyl or ethyl ester mixture is known as
biodiesel.
12Conversion of the triglycerides making up the
oils to fatty acid esters and glycerol
13Advantages of Biodiesel
- Compared to diesel
- Biodiesel is non-toxic and more biodegradable (Ma
and Hanna, 1999), with a very low sulphur
content, which on combustion produces less carbon
and nitrogen monoxides, soot, hydrocarbons
(Peterson et al.., 1996) - Biodiesel be used in diesel engines without
modification.
14Bioethanol production
15Integrated Biomass Utilization system.
16Bioethanol
- Ethanol can be used as a fuel to replace petrol
and ethanol-fuelled cars started in the 1930s in
the USA where ethanol produced from maize was
used at a concentration of 20 to produce gasohol
called Agrol. Still competes with the
availability of cheaper petrol. - The large-scale production of ethanol as a fuel
started in Brazil in 1975 followed by the USA in
1978, probably initiated by the increases in
crude oil
17Raw materials to Bioethanol
18Production of BioethanolPDC and ADH
- The ability of micro-organisms to produce alcohol
from sugars has been known since Egyptian
times-the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae that
ferments sugars to ethanol and carbon dioxide. - The pathway involved in the production of ethanol
in S. cerevisiae is initially glycolysis and then
pyruvate is converted to acetaldehyde by the
enzyme pyruvate decarboxylase with the release of
carbon dioxide. The Acetaldehyde is converted by
the enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase to ethanol with
the regeneration of NADH.
19PDC mediated Bioethanol production
20PDC
- Pyruvate decarboxylase (PDC, EC 4.1.1.1) is one
of several enzymes that require thiamine
diphosphate (TPP) and a magnesium as essential
cofactors. PDC has a sequence motif that is
common to all TPP- binding enzymes (Hawkins et
al., 1989.) The protein is a tetramer with 60 kDa
subunits.
21Yields of 91, ethanol production to 10-18 max.
Ethanol removal from a bioreactor-?-high
temperature for evaporation-hydrophobic membrane
for selective filtration
22Bioethanol production
- Brazil started in 1975 with a National Alcohol
Programme to produce 95.5 hydrous ethanol
(Alcool) and by 1980s the majority of cars used
this fuel. Initially ethanol was produced by the
fermentation of sugar from sugar cane (Saccharum
officinarum) in simple batch fermenters with
capacities of up to 1.5 million L. - The main renewable substrate for fermentation in
the USA is starch extracted from maize. Initiated
1988 with over 51 plants were operating. Amylase
and an Aspergillus niger amyloglucosidase used to
convert the starch to glucose prior to the
S.cerevisiae fermentation
Challenges Using cellulosic substartes
23A future with Biofuels..
- A global world contribution to CO2 saving of
about 4.5 billion tons of CO2 a year (from
bioethanol use alone), - A further significant reduction of noxious
pollutants (Sox, NOx, CO, and other very toxic
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons) in urban areas.
- The creation, worldwide (mostly in rural regions)
of an estimated 85 million new jobs. This
calculation does not take into account jobs
created in the secondary services sector. (The
total number of jobs lost in the petroleum
industry, as a result of fuel substitution, has
been estimated at around 2 million.)