Lab Discovery: Water Leads to Chemical that “Gunks Up” Biofuels Production
Researchers at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) have determined that water—a prevalent component of biofuel conversion processes—turns the pyrolysis oil component, phenol, into a highly reactive molecular structure that polymerizes, or “gunks up” the conversion process, thereby slowing down key chemical reactions.
This research is part of the Bioenergy Technologies Office’s (BETO’s) Computational Pyrolysis Consortium, a multi-lab effort, with an industrial advisory board, that is helping lead BETO towards its “drop-in” hydrocarbon biofuel conversion cost targets of $2.50/ gallon gasoline equivalent (gge) via a thermochemical conversion pathway and $3.30/gge via a biochemical conversion pathway by 2017.
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