Category Archives: Energy

Diesel Conversion of America

I find it odd that Mercedes talks about “converting” Americans. An article in benzfaqs suggests the USA might see the first diesel-hybrid Bluetec.

The C250 is claimed to get 57.7 mpg, while a C300 Bluetec hybrid gets a claimed 61.4 mpg.

Many people are curious as to why Mercedes is choosing to sell their hybrids in the U.S. before branching out into the great sale waters of the UK. A Mercedes UK spokesman said “The focus has been on the big prize which is converting America.”

W00T! Convert me. Convert me. I’m a believer. Yooo-hooo, over here….

BioDiesel from the wastelands

Wikipedia points out that Jatropha curcas is easy to grow and convert into fuel:

The seeds contain 30% oil [8]that can be processed to produce a high-quality biodiesel fuel, usable in a standard diesel engine. […] Cultivation is uncomplicated. Jatropha curcas can grow in wastelands and grows almost anywhere, even on gravelly, sandy and saline soils. It can thrive on the poorest stony soil and grow in the crevices of rocks. Complete germination is achieved within 9 days.

Again biodiesel presents a major paradigm shift for islands and other remote areas in need of a fuel source.

Oil content varies from 28% to 30% and 94% extraction, one hectare of plantation will give 1.6t (metric tonne) of oil if the soil is average.

This plant is unfit for human consumption as food, requires no pesticides, and it grows even in the desert.

BioDiesel technology leap

Biodiesel production is typically done with refined or edible oils using methanol and an alkaline catalyst. Edible oils are usually diverted to human consumption, so people often mistakenly believe biodiesel will cause conflict with food availability. Edible oils are not a requirement of diesel, however, for two simple reasons:

  1. A large amount of oils and fats are available that are not edible or refined but still can be converted with new technology into biodiesel. This includes waste oil, as well as oil from waste.
  2. Engines can be converted with new technology to run on non-edible oils as well as petroleum diesel and biodiesel. This is how Rudolph originally envisioned things.

The second seems less likely to emerge in mass numbers because the complexity of a hardware solution and support. There are engines and conversion kits today. However, hardware solutions present a far greater task to create, deploy and support than to create a new refinement technique for the supply-chain that produces a consistent grade of fuel from waste.

With regard to the first solution, biodiesel researchers and manufacturers found that alkaline-esterification of certain oils had problems with high levels of free fatty acids (FFA). The FFA react with the alkaline catalyst and generate soaps that inhibit the separation of the ester and glycerin.

One solution is to convert high FFA oils into mono-esters. In other words, an acid esterification phase will convert some of the FFA into biodiesel. This process has been found to be successful already with rubber seeds and even tobacco:

The tobacco biodiesel obtained had the fuel properties within the limits prescribed by the latest American (ASTM D 6751-02) and European (DIN EN 14214) standards, except a somewhat higher acid value than that prescribed by the latter standard (<0.5). Thus, tobacco seeds (TS), as agricultural wastes, might be a valuable renewable raw material for the biodiesel production.

An even more interesting system has been described (somewhat exuberantly) by Gas 2.0. The author suggests that technology has finally begun to reach a reasonable level of efficiency for conversion of waste to fuel.

Basically, the process works like this:

* Raw fats and oils of any type are combined with an alcohol
* This mixture is fed through a sulfated zirconia column heated to 300 degrees Celsius
* Their Easy Fatty Acid Removal (EFAR) system recycles any unreacted raw material back through the reactor
* Excess alcohol is recycled back through the reactor
* Pure biodiesel comes out the end

The advantages of the system are:

* No waste produced; No washing or neutralizing of the biodiesel is necessary
* 100% conversion of raw materials to biodiesel
* Any raw fat or oil can be used to make biodiesel
* Very efficient due to heat recapture from the column
* Sulfated zirconia catalyst never needs replacing
* Very small footprint of the reactor system, uses an extremely small amount of area for the amount of biodiesel produced
* Essentially no emissions and no waste stream from the process; Easy permitting from the government

Sounds very steezy. I am reminded of the vehicles in the book Ring World, where the driver would toss garbage into a hopper for fuel.

A company called Ever Cat Fuels has been created to push the technology and apparently will license it to others three to five years from now.

Central Plains biofuels symposium

Good news:

Kansas State University will host a symposium on the sustainability of biofuels production and processing in the Central Plains. The symposium, scheduled for September 16 at the K-State Alumni Center in Manhattan, Kan., is being sponsored by the Kansas Center for Agricultural Resources and the Environment, K-State Research and Extension, and the K-State Center for Sustainable Energy.

A pre-symposium poster paper session is planned for September 15 from 5-7 p.m. Posters will also be on display during the symposium. Poster entries are now being accepted at http://www.dce.k-state.edu/conf/bioenergy/. Topics must be related to the program purpose. Submission deadline is September 1. Poster presenters are required to register for the symposium and to pay the $40 registration fee.

Target audience for the symposium includes university faculty and staff, state and federal agency personnel, farm groups, and industry representatives from Kansas and neighboring states.

This program is designed to disseminate technical information regarding the sustainability of biofuels production and processing, including production of feedstocks, biofuels processing, by-product utilization, implications for use of natural resources, short- and long-term economics, and social and environmental impacts. Presentations will summarize existing technical information, ongoing research, and technological challenges for the future.

Questions about poster submissions and registration should be directed to Debbie Hagenmaier, program coordinator, at debbieh AT k-state.edu. Questions about the symposium program or purpose should be directed to Bill Hargrove at bhargrov AT k-state.edu.

Amazing that there will only be two weeks between submission and the symposium. Maybe I will propose something on national security, individuality and energy policy. The link between biofuels and security management is more tangible than ever.