Tiny Credit Card Sized Device Can Produce Hundreds of Thousands of Gallons of BIO Diesel per year!

Googer

Lifer
Nov 11, 2004
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Microreactor for biodiesel production

(link to this article)

April 21, 2006 Another wonderous enabling technology has been announced - a microreactor, about half the size of a credit card that produces biodiesel by combining alcohol and vegetable oil directly, greatly speeding and simplifying production compared to traditional methods. By stacking many of these microreactors in parallel, a device the size of a small suitcase could produce hundreds of thousands of gallons per year of biodiesel ? enough to power several farms. The device could significantly reduce farmer dependence on mass-produced petroleum. "This is all about producing energy in such a way that it liberates people," said inventor and OSU Professor Goran Jovanovic. "Most people think large-scale, central production of energy is cheaper, because we've been raised with that paradigm. But distributed energy production means you can use local resources - farmers can produce all the energy they need from what they grow on their own farms." Jovanovic is seeking to partner in order to commercialize the technology.

"This could be as important an invention as the mouse for your PC," said Goran Jovanovic, the OSU professor who developed the biodiesel microreactor. "If we're successful with this, nobody will ever make biodiesel any other way."

Current biodiesel production methods involve dissolving a catalyst, such as sodium hydroxide, in alcohol, then agitating the alcohol mixture with vegetable oil in large vats for two hours. The liquid then sits for 12 to 24 hours while a slow chemical reaction occurs, creating biodiesel and glycerin, a byproduct that is separated. This glycerin can be used to make soaps, but first the catalyst in it must be neutralized and removed using hydrochloric acid, a tedious and costly process.

The microreactor developed at OSU eliminates the mixing, the standing time for separation and potentially the need for a dissolved catalyst. Jovanovic is also developing a method for coating the microchannels with a non-toxic metallic catalyst. This would eliminate the need for the chemical catalyst altogether, making the production process even simpler.

The microreactor, being developed in association with the Oregon Nanoscience and Microtechnologies Institute (ONAMI), consists of a series of parallel channels, each smaller than a human hair, through which vegetable oil and alcohol are pumped simultaneously. At such a small scale the chemical reaction that converts the oil into biodiesel is almost instant. Although the amount of biodiesel produced from a single microreactor is a trickle, the reactors can be connected and stacked in banks to dramatically increase production. "By stacking many of these microreactors in parallel, a device the size of a small suitcase could produce enough biodiesel to power several farms, or produce hundreds of thousands of gallons per year," Jovanovic said.

Using microreactors, biodiesel could be produced between 10 and 100 times faster than traditional methods, said Jovanovic, who is also developing a method for coating the microchannels with a non-toxic metallic catalyst.

Jovanovic is looking to partner with a new or existing company in order to commercialize the technology through the Microproducts Breakthrough Institute at ONAMI, Oregon's signature research center focused on growing research and commercialization to accelerate innovation-based economic development in Oregon and the Pacific Northwest. But he admitted it will take a visionary business partner.

"The challenge is that we're trying to change a paradigm, moving from centrally-produced energy to distributed energy production, and that's not easy," he said. "But wind and solar energy technologies faced difficulties in their early days. And we're coming to a place in history where we cannot tolerate the growing uncertainty of petroleum-based energy supplies."

ONAMI is a collaboration involving Oregon's three public research universities - Oregon State University, Portland State University and University of Oregon - as well as the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, Wash., the state of Oregon and the regional business community.

President Bush, in his 2006 State-of-the-Union address, pledged support for cutting-edge research in methods to produce biofuels.
 

So

Lifer
Jul 2, 2001
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like all alternative fuel technologies, if you can demonstate that it can plausibly produce the same enegy output to energy extraction ratio as well oil I'll listen...until then, no dice.
 

TitanDiddly

Guest
Dec 8, 2003
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Interesting. I'm planning on going biodiesel for financial reasons later this year, when I get some space to set up a reactor in. I've got my diesel Merc, all studied up. Next semester I'll be joining Auto Society, so I'll get a shop spot, where I can put my reactor.

Woot.
 

NeoPTLD

Platinum Member
Nov 23, 2001
2,544
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Gotta love how the display says "biodiesel is ten times less toxic than table salt", but completely leaves out that it produces more NOx emissions than the regular diesel fuel when used in a diesel engine.
 

compuwiz1

Admin Emeritus Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
27,111
926
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Any invention that can take away from the profits of the big oil companies, will never see the light of day, and may very well lead to assasinations, as well.
 

Googer

Lifer
Nov 11, 2004
12,576
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Originally posted by: NeoPTLD
Gotta love how the display says "biodiesel is ten times less toxic than table salt", but completely leaves out that it produces more NOx emissions than the regular diesel fuel when used in a diesel engine.

I think what they are reffering to is the Unburned Bio-Fuel vs Unburned Petro-Fuel.

Don't the plants reabsorb the NOx and then re-use it to make more fuel?
 

NeoPTLD

Platinum Member
Nov 23, 2001
2,544
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Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: NeoPTLD
Gotta love how the display says "biodiesel is ten times less toxic than table salt", but completely leaves out that it produces more NOx emissions than the regular diesel fuel when used in a diesel engine.

I think what they are reffering to is the Unburned Bio-Fuel vs Unburned Petro-Fuel.

Don't the plants reabsorb the NOx and then re-use it to make more fuel?

No, it leads to smog and acid rain.

NOx is one of the most difficult diesel engine pollutants to scrub out from the exhaust. Search "urea injection". It takes some elaborate setup to reduce NOx emissions from a diesel engine.