BIO FUEL
Cutting the cost of ethanol, other biofuels and gasoline
by Staff Writers
New Brunswick NJ (SPX) Jul 10, 2017


Enzymes, genetically engineered to avoid sticking to the surfaces of biomass such as corn stalks, may lower costs in the production of cellulose-based biofuels like ethanol. Credit Shishir Chundawat/Rutgers University and U.S. Department of Energy.

Biofuels like the ethanol in U.S. gasoline could get cheaper thanks to experts at Rutgers University-New Brunswick and Michigan State University.

They've demonstrated how to design and genetically engineer enzyme surfaces so they bind less to corn stalks and other cellulosic biomass, reducing enzyme costs in biofuels production, according to a study published this month on the cover of the journal ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering.

"The bottom line is we can cut down the cost of converting biomass into biofuels," said Shishir P. S. Chundawat, senior author of the study and an assistant professor in the Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering at Rutgers University-New Brunswick.

Typically, the enzymes tapped to help turn switchgrass, corn stover (corn stalks, leaves and other leftovers) and poplar into biofuels amount to about 20 percent of production costs, said Chundawat, whose department is in the School of Engineering. Enzymes cost about 50 cents per gallon of ethanol, so recycling or using fewer enzymes would make biofuels more inexpensive.

In the United States, gasoline typically contains up to 10 percent ethanol and corn grain is the primary feedstock of ethanol, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Biorefineries produce about 15 billion gallons of ethanol a year.

In the last few years, some refineries began converting the inedible parts of corn plants into ethanol, Chundawat said.

"The challenge is breaking down cellulose (plant) material, using enzymes, into sugars that can be fermented into ethanol," he said. "So any advances on making the enzyme processing step cheaper will make the cost of biofuel cheaper. This is a fairly intractable problem that requires you to attack it from various perspectives, so it does take time."

Biomass contains lignin, an organic polymer that binds to and strengthens plant fibers. But lignin inactivates enzymes that bind to it, hampering efforts to reduce enzyme use and costs, according to Chundawat.

The Rutgers and Michigan State University researchers showed how specially designed enzymes (proteins) can limit their binding to and inactivation by lignin. That would ultimately lower enzyme use and make enzyme recycling feasible for biorefineries in the near future, Chundawat said.

Research paper

BIO FUEL
A whole-genome sequenced rice mutant resource for the study of biofuel feedstocks
Berkeley CA (SPX) Jul 07, 2017
Rice is a staple food for over half of the world's population and a model for studies of candidate bioenergy grasses such as sorghum, switchgrass, and Miscanthus. To optimize crops for biofuel production, scientists are seeking to identify genes that control key traits such as yield, resistance to disease, and water use efficiency. Populations of mutant plants, each one having one or more ... read more

Related Links
Rutgers University
Bio Fuel Technology and Application News

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

BIO FUEL
Could America shield Alaska from a N.Korean missile?

Polish Ministry of Defense announces PAC-3 missile defense acquisition

Lockheed Martin receives Australian Hobart-class destroyer Aegis contract

Lockheed Martin receives contract modification for UAE THAAD

BIO FUEL
US to test anti-missile system amid N Korea tensions

Anglo-French missile completes first test firing

Poland in talks with Lockheed for inidigenous HIMARS rocket system

Lockheed Martin receives $73.8 million long-range precision fires contract

BIO FUEL
New Reaper drone variant performs first combat mission

Smart Quadcopters Find their Way without Human Help or GPS

Rafael unveils Drone Dome anti-drone system

China drone king turns to farming

BIO FUEL
First UAVs, Now Ships - Connectivity for the next generation of remote naval operations

DISA extends Comtech satellite services to Marines

Harris Corp. awarded Special Forces radio contract

Airbus provides German troops with support communications at 15 sites worldwide

BIO FUEL
Orbital ATK shows ammo development for MK44 gun

Switzerland orders Saab's anti-tank weapon

BAE, Leonardo partner on precision-guided artillery ammunition

Denmark contracts with General Dynamics for EAGLE armored ATVs

BIO FUEL
Kelvin Hughes to be sold to Hensoldt

Defense spending by European NATO countries to rise in 2017

House Appropriations defense subcommittee bill could mean more ships, planes

Weapons found after shots fired in oil field: Saudi

BIO FUEL
NATO vows support for Ukraine against Russia's 'aggressive actions'

India holds naval exercises with US, Japan

US warplanes fly over disputed South China Sea

Trump, Putin hold first meeting at protest-marred G20 summit

BIO FUEL
Nanostructures taste the rainbow

Chemists perform surgery on nanoparticles

Silver atom nanoclusters could become efficient biosensors

Superconducting nanowire memory cell, miniaturized technology