Making Ethanol from Wood ChipsOne startup is scaling up experimental techniques to demonstrate the commercial potential of cellulosic ethanol.
Experimental methods for converting wood chips and grass into ethanol will soon be tested at production scale. Mascoma Corporation, based in Cambridge, MA, is building demonstration facilities that will have the capacity to produce about one-half to two million gallons of ethanol a year from waste biomass. The startup recently received $30 million in venture-capital money, which is fueling its scale-up plans.
While Mascoma has not achieved its ultimate goal of using a single genetically engineered organism to convert wood chips and other cellulosic raw materials into ethanol, the company has developed genetically modified bacteria that can speed up part of the process of producing ethanol. The optimized process shows enough promise to invest in scaling up the technology, says Colin South, Mascoma's president. Corn grain, the current source of ethanol in the United States, requires large amounts of land and energy to produce. This, along with the demand for corn as food, limits the total amount of ethanol that can be produced from corn to about 15 billion gallons a year--about three times what is currently produced. If the fuel is to supplant a sizable fraction of the 140 billion gallons of gasoline consumed each year in the United States, ethanol producers will need to turn to biomass such as wood chips and switchgrass. These resources are cheaper and potentially much more abundant, and they can be converted to ethanol much more efficiently than corn can because they require less energy to grow (see "Redesigning Life to Make Ethanol"). Indeed, ethanol from such sources could replace "a very large fraction" of the gasoline currently used for vehicles, says Gregory Stephanopoulos, professor of chemical engineering at MIT. He says some experts estimate that with gains in efficiency and high yields of ethanol, all the gasoline for transportation could be replaced; the most conservative estimates say that about 20 percent could be replaced. Hoping to capitalize on this potential, a handful of companies--including Celunol, in Dedham, MA; Iogen, in Ottawa, Canada, which has an existing demonstration scale plant and plans to scale up to commercial production; and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), in Golden, CO--are working to develop better technology for making cellulosic ethanol. Despite its potential, cellulosic ethanol is expensive to make today. It requires more costly equipment and more processing steps than does making ethanol from corn grain. While both corn and cellulosic ethanol are created by fermenting sugar, converting the starch in corn grain into sugar is much easier than converting the complex cellulose in cornstalks or biomass such as wood chips. To simplify the process and reduce costs, many researchers ultimately hope to engineer a single organism that can both break down the cellulose and convert the resulting sugars into ethanol. But research is already improving parts of the process. For example, researchers have created a cocktail of enzymes for converting cellulose into sugar that is a hundred times cheaper than previous methods, says George Douglas, spokesman for the NREL.
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Cellulosic Ethanol on the Cheap
05/12/2009










Comments
dickcaro
11/16/2006
Posts:8
Burning it, on the other hand, is not wasteful. Pulpwood forests are a renewable resource, so the CO2 that's generated is recycled back into more wood. Beats burning oil or gas in the same boiler.
jpdemers
11/17/2006
Posts:40
Please include the words * Chemical engineering - ethanol * in the subject header.
Thanks.
Lambchop
Lambchop_Che...
12/31/2006
Posts:1
check out this company, dynamotive.com. they are successfully converting forestry wastes into bio-fuel. this shows more promise than ethanol.
cliff lewis, sappi fine paper, north america
cdlewis
07/30/2007
Posts:6
If you are interested in a partnership contact Neil Farbstein, President of Vulvox Nano/biotechnology at protn7@att.net
protn7
11/22/2006
Posts:69
jdrodrigu
01/09/2007
Posts:1
Rocky
rockypatel12...
07/23/2007
Posts:1
N O M
04/17/2008
Posts:23
Neil Farbstein is emphatically and most unequivocally not a rancid distended crap-sack of duplicitous swindling double dealing defaecation. Furthermore, he's assuredly not a colossal foul jissom bucket of pumped-up delusional human excrement posing as a profoundly psychotic muttonhead.
[URL]http://www.physforum.com/index.php?showtopic=21242&st=105[/URL]
fivedoughnut
04/20/2008
Posts:1
porosity
12/27/2006
Posts:3
So far, the best site I've found is <a href="http://www.investincellulosicethanol.com"> www.InvestInCellulosicEthanol.com </a>.
m_albertson
02/03/2007
Posts:4
jeanwilliam
01/13/2008
Posts:2
Daddeo01905
04/07/2007
Posts:1
cdlewis
10/29/2007
Posts:6
Brian Maki
12/17/2007
Posts:1
jeanwilliam
05/06/2008
Posts:2
I am from Green Land Company, Inc. which is based in Troy, Alabama.
We have some Jatropha seeds and seedlings.
My E-mail address is vinay_bhalu@yahoo.com
Thank you,
Vinay
vpatel58244
11/04/2009
Posts:1