Posted on 12/15/2006 11:16:07 AM PST by Red Badger
Inexpensive and abundant diesel fuel from an unlikely source - algae - is getting a Colorado boost toward commercial production.
Colorado State University and Solix Biofuels Inc., a Boulder start up company, unveiled a plan Thursday to develop a prototype bioreactor at the New Belgium Brewery in Fort Collins, possibly leading to wider commercial production within two years.
Researchers at CSU and Solix are billing the renewable technology as a way to help wean the United States from imported oil.
An additional benefit could be using carbon dioxide from power-plant emissions as a feedstock for the algae. Carbon dioxide is a suspected contributor to global warming.
The researchers said experimental production at CSU shows that the process can make fuel at a cost close to current retail prices. Colorado diesel sold at an average of $2.68 a gallon Thursday, according to AAA.
"We're facing two global challenges: depletion of our petroleum reserves and a buildup of greenhouse gases," said Bryan Willson, director of CSU's Engines and Energy Conversion Laboratory. "This process harnesses photosynthesis to turn carbon dioxide and energy captured from the sun into an economical petroleum substitute."
By the end of next year, Solix plans to open a 0.4-acre bioreactor at New Belgium that will produce 3,000 gallons of diesel per year.
The brewery will use excess carbon dioxide to test the biodiesel process.
Solix officials declined to disclose the projected cost of the new prototype bioreactor but said they expect commercial-scale plants to cost $50,000 to $70,000 per acre. The process is expected to yield 8,000 gallons of biodiesel per acre.
The technology isn't new. The Golden-based National Renewable Energy Laboratory studied the concept from 1978 until 1996, when funding was cut, and several firms across the nation are experimenting with variations on algae-to-diesel techniques.
"The technology is pretty straightforward, and we think there's tremendous potential," said Eric Jarvis, a biofuels researcher at the NREL.
But Jarvis said major hurdles remain, including developing algae strains that maximize oil production, improving processes to extract water and oil from algae, finding investment capital to develop a broad network of production sites and building out a much larger retail distribution network.
Better known as the scourge of swimming-pool and aquarium owners, algae is viewed by scientists as a good candidate for fuel production because it is much more efficient than canola and soy, currently the two major sources of biodiesel.
Solix founder Jim Sears said algae can produce as much as 100 times more oil per acre than soy and canola.
Algae researchers have been stumped by two problems: invasion of high-oil-content algae by low-oil indigenous versions, and the costs of regulating temperatures in ponds.
Solix officials believe they've solved both problems by developing closed plastic growing containers that keep out undesirable algae types and a low-energy temperature-control system that optimizes growth.
Diesel primary power plus an on-board electric power generation with a discharge-recharge electric cell array, using individual drive motors at each wheel, would seem to be an even better engineering "elegant answer" than the gasoline-powered units now on the road. Presently, the weak point is the deep-cycle batteries necessary to take full advantage of regenerative braking and "burst" power demands of acceleration. The best current designs are still prone to overheating during charge or discharge, and potential catastrophic failure (exploding or bursting into flame).
One alternative I have sort of mulled over, is instead of an electrical component being used to transmit power from the primary power unit to the wheels, is to use a hydrostatic system, with an accumulator tank, some form of compressed gas over the hydraulic medium. The primary power unit would drive a hydrostatic pump, which would first build pressure to the accumulator, then from the accumulator, meter out the power to each individual hydrostatic wheel motor. By reversing the valving in the hydrostatic motor, it could be used for its braking effect, pumping the pressure back to the accumulator.
Because of the great flexibility of the system, the center of gravity could be placed quite low, without consideration for transmission or axle clearances, as the hydrostatic motors would be placed near the wheel hubs. In fact, each hydrostatic motor could be fitted with a planetary gearset, allowing both low-speed, high-torque application, and high-speed cruising with minimal power input. Everything would be controlled with electronic sensors that would increase or decrease the pressure applied to each of the wheel motors as conditions warrant.
All this with a small Diesel engine, running at a near-constant speed, staying within a very narrow RPM band. The engine could be fine-tuned for maximum economy in this very narrow band (excessive engine output would seem sort of redundant with this design), and the overall economy is much less affected by "heavy-handed" driver characteristics. If you want more power for a burst of acceleration, let the accumulator build a little more first. Rather like getting up a "head of steam" on an old steam locomotive. The throttle would control how much pressure is being sent to the hydrostatic motors, not engine speed. When the pressure has accumulated to a sufficiently high level, the engine could even be shut off for varying periods of time, and restarted as the pressure dropped below a certain point.
We are not done inventing personal transportation yet.
Yep.
Ironically, phosphates were removed from laundry soap, in large part because they're such good fertilizer for algae.
This algae to diesel stuff is strictly vanity projects. If you want diesel then dig up clean Western coal and via liquefaction convert it into diesel, jet fuel and heating oil. Other heavier products come out too such as tar.
Yes, coal is the biggest possible source for diesel in the future, but then you have to go thru the enviro-nazis to get it. At least with the Algae diesel you can call it "green" technology............
Check out the price for algae in the health food store. It's $25/lb. Thus diesel will never be made from algae even if they get it down to say $5/lb for non food grade algae
Algae to diesel is a pure waste of time. Who funds this crap?
I've followed the health food biz for decades and there were claims that spirulina would feed the starving world. Building algae ponds just doesn't seem to compute. Spirulina is never less than $25/lb. So much for a mass solution to starvation.
Algae researchers have been stumped by two problems: invasion of high-oil-content algae by low-oil indigenous versions, and the costs of regulating temperatures in ponds.
This must plague those who grow health food store algae. Lots of which is grown in Hawaii
The diesel algae is grown in sealed tanks, not open ones.......
Sealed reactors? Maybe they have something but algae needs sunlight as far as I know. Maybe they have a few tricks up their sleeve. Good luck drying out that algae slop for a diesel conversion
Sounds good. Along with solar energy, wind, coal, and our own oil drilled wherever we can (no thanks to envirowhackos), and other things, we can kick the Middle East terror-funding oil habit. And the Hugo Chavez oil habit while we're at it. :-)
http://www.greenfuelonline.com/technology.htm
How it works:
The Emissions-to-Biofuels process is a flexible platform for converting CO2 emissions into a range of renewable fuels. The process is designed to be retrofitted to flue stacks with minimal impact to ongoing operations. The process schematic diagram is shown in the following figure:
Process Flow - Power Generators Flue gas or other CO2-rich gas streams are introduced to the bioreactor, in which algae are suspended in a media with nutrients added to optimize the growth rate. A portion of the media is withdrawn continuously from the bioreactor and sent to dewatering to harvest the algae. The dewatering operation uses two stages of conventional processing. Primary dewatering increases the algae concentration by a factor of 10-30. Secondary dewatering further increases the algal solids concentration to yield a cake suitable for downstream processing. Water removed from the dewatering steps is returned to the bioreactor, with a small purge stream to prevent precipitation of salts. Make-up water is added to maintain the media volume. A blower pulls the flue gas through the bioreactor. Using an induced draft fan provides several operating advantages, including ensuring minimal disruption to power plant operations, simplifying retrofits to existing facilities. The process steps from the flue gas inlet through end of dewatering comprise the "front end" of the GFT process. The unit operations for algal oil extraction and conversion of the dewatered algae into final fuel products is the "downstream processing" portion of the flow sheet. In contrast to the front-end unit operations, the downstream processes are conventional technologies currently practiced on a large scale, e.g. biodiesel is currently produced from vegetable oils via transesterification (several algae species have lipids, starch, and protein compositions similar to soy and canola beans). Consequently the same facilities can be adapted to produce biodiesel from algae and conventional agricultural feeds. Some downstream processing options are listed in the following table:
"Check out the price for algae in the health food store. It's $25/lb. Thus diesel will never be made from algae even if they get it down to say $5/lb for non food grade algae
Algae to diesel is a pure waste of time. Who funds this crap?"
Dennis, you are forgetting the economie of scale. The algea in your health food store is from limited sources and supply is limited mostly because of a lack of demand.
IF this technology works and they overcome the issues outlined in the article, then the volume of production will increase and the price will fall.
Or don't you believe in the fundamentals of supply & demand?
So what if they will be funded to over come the difficulties and start-up costs. Big Oil got vast tax breaks on upgrading their refineries to produce Ultra Low Sulphur fuels 10 years later than Europe, and that's why you can't buy diesels in several key states (there is no way high sulphur diesel will pass the emmissions test).
Cool idea! Let's ban burials and cremations....It's for the children.
You are obviously an expert, try blacklightpower.com for a high energy density electric battery.
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