Biodiesel revolution on the cards
Wednesday, April 26, 2006
RESEARCHERS at Oregon State University may revolutionise the biodiesel industry before it has a chance to revolutionise the fuel economy, with a nanotech microreactor the size of a credit card able to transform vegetable oil into biodiesel almost instantaneously.
Professor Goran Jovanovic,Oregon State University, developer of a biodiesel microreactor
The tiny chemical reactor is said to feed vegetable oil and alcohol into parallel channels in the microreactor, producing biodiesel almost immediately, doing away with the need for large plants and catalytic processes, which generally take more than 24 hours to produce biodiesel.
The microreactor is being developed by Oregon State University and the Oregon Nanoscience and Microtechnologies Institute with a view to creating a commercial unit that will allow farmers to produce biodiesel onsite, reducing the associated transport costs built into fuel prices.
The microreactor was originally developed by chemical engineering professor Goran Jovanovic at Oregon State University.
"This is all about producing energy in such a way that it liberates people," Jovanovic said.
"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."
The development team has indicated that the card-sized devices could be stacked into banks to facilitate the production of commercial quantities of biodiesel.
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