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geomancer
11-27-2010, 11:33 AM
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/11/101125202013.htm

A High-Yield Biomass Alternative to Petroleum for Industrial Chemicals

ScienceDaily (Nov. 26, 2010) — A team of University of Massachusetts Amherst chemical engineers report in November 25 issue of Science that they have developed a way to produce high-volume chemical feedstocks including benzene, toluene, xylenes and olefins from pyrolytic bio-oils, the cheapest liquid fuels available today derived from biomass. The new process could reduce or eliminate industry's reliance on fossil fuels to make industrial chemicals worth an estimated $400 billion annually.

Instead of buying petroleum by the barrel, chemical manufacturers will now be able to use relatively cheaper, widely available pyrolysis oils made from waste wood, agricultural waste and non-food energy crops to produce the same high-value materials for making everything from solvents and detergents to plastics and fibers.

As principal investigator George Huber, associate professor of chemical engineering at UMass Amherst, explains, "Thanks to this breakthrough, we can meet the need to make commodity chemical feedstocks entirely through processing pyrolysis oils. We are making the same molecules from biomass that are currently being produced from petroleum, with no infrastructure changes required."

He adds, "We think this technology will provide a big boost to the economy because pyrolysis oils are commercially available now. The major difference between our approach and the current method is the feedstock; our process uses a renewable feedstock, that is, plant biomass. Rather than purchasing petroleum to make these chemicals, we use pyrolysis oils made from non-food agricultural crops and woody biomass grown domestically. This will also provide United States farmers and landowners a large additional revenue stream."

In the past, these compounds were made in a low-yield process, the chemical engineer adds. "But here we show how to achieve three times higher yields of chemicals from pyrolysis oil than ever achieved before. We've essentially provided a roadmap for converting low-value pyrolysis oils into products with a higher value than transportation fuels."

In the paper, he and doctoral students Tushar Vispute, Aimaro Sanno and Huiyan Zhang show how to make olefins such as ethylene and propylene, the building blocks of many plastics and resins, plus aromatics such as benzene, toluene and xylenes found in dyes, plastics and polyurethane, from biomass-based pyrolysis oils. They use a two-step, integrated catalytic approach starting with a "tunable," variable-reaction hydrogenation stage followed by a second, zeolite catalytic step. The zeolite catalyst has the proper pore structure and active sites to convert biomass-based molecules into aromatic hydrocarbons and olefins.

Huber, Vispute and colleagues discuss how to choose among three options including low- and high-temperature hydrogenation steps as well as the zeolite conversion for optimal results. Their findings indicate that "the olefin-to-aromatic ratio and the types of olefins and aromatics produced can be adjusted according to market demand." That is, using the new techniques, chemical producers can manage the carbon content from biomass they need, as well as hydrogen amounts. Huber and colleagues provide economic calculations for determining the optimal mix of hydrogen and pyrolytic oils, depending on market prices, to yield the highest-grade product at the lowest cost.

A pilot plant on the UMass Amherst campus is now producing these chemicals on a liter-quantity scale using this new method. The technology has been licensed to Anellotech Corp., co-founded by Huber and David Sudolsky of New York City. Anellotech is also developing UMass Amherst technology invented by the Huber research team to convert solid biomass directly into chemicals. Thus, pyrolysis oil represents a second renewable feedstock for Anellotech.

Sudolsky, Anellotech's CEO, says, "There are several companies developing technology to produce pyrolysis oil from biomass. The problem has been that pyrolysis oils must be upgraded to be useable. But with the new UMass Amherst process, Anellotech can now convert these pyrolysis oils into valuable chemicals at higher efficiency and with very attractive economics. This is very exciting."

Sciguy
11-28-2010, 02:52 AM
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/11/101125202013.htm

A High-Yield Biomass Alternative to Petroleum for Industrial Chemicals

ScienceDaily (Nov. 26, 2010) — A team of University of Massachusetts Amherst chemical engineers report in November 25 issue of Science that they have developed a way to produce high-volume chemical feedstocks including benzene, toluene, xylenes and olefins from pyrolytic bio-oils,

There is approximately one transparent fraud introduced to the internet each week, claiming to solve the world's oil problem by converting garbage into oil, as though a civilized society would produce garbage and as though garbage were a given of nature. In the last month, some Japanese claimed that they were going to pyrolyze all plastic and produce oil. It's pathetic!

I am happy to recognize this claim as something different. The feedstocks are not waste biomass (except for a passing mention) but plants that are grown for their organic content which is then processed and refined into the organic chemicals needed for chemical synthesis of everything organic that we use.

This provides the third leg of the stool. We have solar for electricity, solar for heating and now solar for organic molecules, the most concentrated form of energy storage for vehicles.

I don't actually know if this process is workable or real progress but it is the basic concept which makes sense. Use the sun to grow organic molecules. Pyrolysis is an inherently wasteful way to harvest from plants. There are already many direct ways. Quaker Oats has been making tetrahydrofuran (look on the ingredient list of your PVC cement) from oat hulls for decades and fatty acids from vegetable oils is old news. Soon cellulose and starch will provide specialized molecules, probably by enzymatic fermentation. Simple solvents in vast quantities haven't been available. But the chemistry is marching on.

At the same time, we can still be proud to make use of petroleum for its organic molecules. Burning the exquisite molecules in petroleum to heat water to make electricity or to move vehicles is an act of vandalism. But using the molecular complexity in its high form is a proper use of that natural gift. In similar ways, we need to find ways to use plant materials to produce organic synthetic and industrial molecules in cheap and low temperature ways. Pyrolysis has to yield to better methods. But it's a start.

Watch out for those frauds though. Anytime you read about how someone will "get rid of a garbage problem" you can smell something rotten. Investment and government support for these boondoggles flows freely. Try to actually solve garbage problems in a scientific and logical way (that is the role of the Zero Waste Institute) and they run in the other direction. Garbage is king. Americans love their garbage and will not tolerate anyone messing with it except to get rid of it for them and they don't care how.

But I digress.

Sciguy