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Bioenergy-Biodiesel

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... so as to not disrupt local ecosystems. PetroSun has dedicated 20 acres of ponds for a proposed algae derived JP8 jet fuel research and development program. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Bioenergy-Biodiesel


1
Bioenergy-Biodiesel
2
Agenda
  • Why biodiesel?
  • How to make it?
  • Possible sources
  • Transesterification
  • Biodiesel plants
  • Imperium renewables
  • Biodiesel story
  • Biodiesel/bioethanol discussion

3
Rudolf Diesel (1893)
  • The use of vegetable oils for engine fuels
    may seem insignificant today, he argued, but
    such oils may become, in the course of time, as
    important as petroleum and the coal-tar products
    of the present time."

4
Energy content
Gasoline Ethanol
Biodiesel
100 67
86
5
Biodiesel versus bioethanol (1)
12 x more (2005)
Europe currently represents 80 of global
biodiesel consumption and production
6
Biodiesel versus bioethanol (2)
7
Biodiesel
  • Biodiesel is not the same thing as raw vegetable
    oil. It is produced by a chemical process which
    removes the glycerol from the oil.
  • Biodiesel
  • Domestic
  • Renewable
  • For diesel engines
  • Derived from oils and fats

8
Why biodiesel?
  • Biodiesel
  • Biodegradable
  • Non-toxic
  • Lower gas emission that diesel when burned
    (reduced green house gases emission by at least
    68)
  • Commercially available in Europe and US
  • Low S content
  • High lubricity

9
Biodiesel production
  • Biodiesel is typically produced by a reaction of
    a vegetable oil or animal fat with an alcohol
    such as methanol or ethanol in the presence of a
    catalyst to yield mono-alkyl esters and glycerol,
    which is removed.

10
How?
  • Tranesterification alcohol ester ? different
    alcohol different ester
  • Base of acid as a catalyst
  • The oil is mixed with an alcohol, usually
    methanol or ethanol, and separated into methyl
    esters (biodiesel) and glycerol.

11
Transesterification
Methyl esters
12
Biodiesel technology
13
(No Transcript)
14
Possible sources
  • Vegetable oil (soy, canola, palm, rapeseed,
  • coconut etc.)
  • Non food plants (jatropha)
  • Recycled oil (McDonalds fryer)
  • Animal fats (fish oil)
  • Algae

15
Palm oil (1)
  • Palm oil plantations-approximately 11 million
    hectares (2006) in the world
  • Conversion of tropical forest in Asia into palm
    oil plantation
  • Habitat destruction and potential extinction of
    certain endangered species (e.g. the orangutans
    in Borneo, the Sumatran tigers and Asian
    rhinoceros)

16
Palm oil (2)
  • Palm oil is derived from the plants fruit
  • A hundred kilograms of oil seeds typically
    produce 20 kilograms of oil
  • Crude palm oil is extracted from the yellow parts
    of oil palm fruit

17
Algae to biodiesel
Gallons of oil/acre/year
Corn 15
Soybeans 48
Sunflower 102
Rapeseed 127
Palm oil 635
Algae 1850cost
Pond algae
Greenfuels bioreactors
18
What are algae?
  • Primitive plants closely related to fungi
  • No true leaves, stems or root systems
  • Reproduce by means of spores, cell division or
    fragmentation.  
  • Live" from excess nutrients in the water and
    sunlight  
  • Over 17,400 species of algae have been identified
    and thousands more probably exist
  • Not all of them produce high of oils

19
Algae news (March, 2008)-PetroSun
  • March, 2008 PetroSun's, commercial algae farm in
    Rio Hondo, Texas has begun production of algae
    for biofuel production.
  • 1,100 acres of saltwater or wastewater ponds
  • 4.4 million gallons of algal oil and 110 million
    pounds of biomass on an annual basis .
  • Farming system will utilize native microalgae
    strains, so as to not disrupt local ecosystems.
  • PetroSun has dedicated 20 acres of ponds for a
    proposed algae derived JP8 jet fuel research and
    development program.
  • http//www.petrosuninc.com/index.html

20
Jatropha (Jatropha curcas) (1)
  • Resistant to drought and pests
  • Grows on marginal lands
  • India, South Africa, South East Asia
  • Seeds contain up to 40 oil
  • Oil in the seeds for biodiesel
  • Residues for power electricity plants
  • The plant yields more than
  • 4x /ha that of soybean
  • 10x /ha that of corn

21
Jatropha (Jatropha curcas) (2)
  • British Petroleum and D1 oils D1-BP Fuel Crops
    Limited (160 million over the next 5 years)
  • Producing and growing jatropha seedlings
  • 172,000 hectares of existing plantations in
    India, Southern Africa and South East Asia
  • Imperium Renewables
  • Growing Jatropha curcas in Hawaii as a feedstock
    for biodiesel production

22
Imperium Renewables (1)
Imperium Renewables has constructed a new
biodiesel manufacturing plant at the Port of
Grays Harbor. The facility includes 8 main tanks
that can hold 2 million gallons each, and 2
smaller tanks that can hold 500,000 gallons each.
The rail line that serves the facility passes
through the center of this photo. Imperium
Renewablesthe largest biodiesel facility in US.
23
Imperium Renewables (2)
  • February 24th, 2008
  • Virgin Atlantic Boeing 747
  • 20 biofuel (coconut)80 standard fuel (1/4
    engine)
  • No modification to the engine
  • Washington ferries Issaquah, March 2008
  • B5 blend of canola biodiesel

24
Biodiesel cars
  • The 86 fuel economy compared to 100 gasoline
  • A smoother running engine due to the cleaning and
    lubricating properties of the fuel. 
  • Other benefits
  • Better smelling exhaust (french fries or a warm
    waffle iron).
  • Special materials required for fuel lines, hoses,
    valves, gaskets
  • B10, B20.

25
Bioethanol versus biodiesel
  • Feedstock (competition with food industry)
  • Major producers
  • Process
  • Yields
  • Production facilities
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