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Butanol fuel

Butanol may be used as a fuel in an internal combustion engine. It is more similar to gasoline than it is to ethanol. A C4-hydrocarbon, butanol is a drop-in fuel and thus works in vehicles designed for use with gasoline without modification.[1] Both n-butanol and isobutanol have been studied as possible fuels. Both can be produced from biomass (as "biobutanol"[2][3][4] ) as well as from fossil fuels (as "petrobutanol"[5]). The chemical properties depend on the isomer (n-butanol or isobutanol), not on the production method.

Butanol, a C-4 hydrocarbon is a promising bio-derived fuel, which shares many properties with gasoline.


Genetically modified organisms edit

Obtaining higher yields of butanol involves manipulation of the metabolic networks using metabolic engineering and genetic engineering.[6][7] While significant progress has been made, fermentation pathways for producing butanol remain inefficient. Titer and yields are low and separation is very expensive. As such, microbial production of butanol is not cost-competitive relative to petroleum-derived butanol.[8]

Although unproven commercially, combining electrochemical and microbial production methods may offer a way to produce butanol from sustainable sources.[9]

Escherichia coli edit

Escherichia coli, or E. coli, is a Gram-negative, rod-shaped bacterium. E. coli is the microorganism most likely to move on to commercial production of isobutanol.[10] In its engineered form, E. coli produces the highest yields of isobutanol of any microorganism.[citation needed] Methods such as elementary mode analysis have been used to improve the metabolic efficiency of E. coli so that larger quantities of isobutanol may be produced.[11] E. coli is an ideal isobutanol bio-synthesizer for several reasons:

  • E. coli is an organism for which several tools of genetic manipulation exist, and it is an organism for which an extensive body of scientific literature exists.[10] This wealth of knowledge allows E. coli to be easily modified by scientists.
  • E. coli has the capacity to use lignocellulose (waste plant matter left over from agriculture) in the synthesis of isobutanol. The use of lignocellulose prevents E. coli from using plant matter meant for human consumption, and prevents any food-fuel price relationship which would occur from the biosynthesis of isobutanol by E. coli.[10]
  • Genetic modification has been used to broaden the scope of lignocellulose which can be used by E. coli. This has made E. coli a useful and diverse isobutanol bio-synthesizer.[12]

The primary drawback of E. coli is that it is susceptible to bacteriophages when being grown. This susceptibility could potentially shut down entire bioreactors.[10] Furthermore, the native reaction pathway for isobutanol in E. coli functions optimally at a limited concentration of isobutanol in the cell. To minimize the sensitivity of E. coli in high concentrations, mutants of the enzymes involved in synthesis can be generated by random mutagenesis. By chance, some mutants may prove to be more tolerant of isobutanol which will enhance the overall yield of the synthesis.[13]

Clostridia edit

n-Butanol can be produced by fermentation of biomass by the A.B.E. process using Clostridium acetobutylicum, Clostridium beijerinckii. C. acetobutylicum was once used for the production of acetone from starch. The butanol was a by-product of fermentation (twice as much butanol was produced). The feedstocks for biobutanol are the same as those for ethanol: energy crops such as sugar beets, sugar cane, corn grain, wheat and cassava, prospective non-food energy crops such as switchgrass and even guayule in North America, as well as agricultural byproducts such as bagasse, straw and corn stalks.[14] According to DuPont, existing bioethanol plants can cost-effectively be retrofitted to biobutanol production.[15] Additionally, butanol production from biomass and agricultural byproducts could be more efficient (i.e. unit engine motive power delivered per unit solar energy consumed) than ethanol or methanol production.[16]

A strain of Clostridium can convert nearly any form of cellulose into butanol even in the presence of oxygen.[17]

A strain of Clostridium cellulolyticum, a native cellulose-degrading microbe, affords isobutanol directly from cellulose.[18]

A combination of succinate and ethanol can be fermented to produce butyrate (a precursor to butanol fuel) by utilizing the metabolic pathways present in Clostridium kluyveri. Succinate is an intermediate of the TCA cycle, which metabolizes glucose. Anaerobic bacteria such as Clostridium acetobutylicum and Clostridium saccharobutylicum also contain these pathways. Succinate is first activated and then reduced by a two-step reaction to give 4-hydroxybutyrate, which is then metabolized further to crotonyl-coenzyme A (CoA). Crotonyl-CoA is then converted to butyrate. The genes corresponding to these butanol production pathways from Clostridium were cloned to E. coli.[19]

Cyanobacteria edit

Cyanobacteria are a phylum of photosynthetic bacteria.[20] They are suited for isobutanol biosynthesis when genetically engineered to produce isobutanol and its corresponding aldehydes.[21] Isobutanol-producing species of cyanobacteria offer several advantages as biofuel synthesizers:

  • Cyanobacteria grow faster than plants[22] and also absorb sunlight more efficiently than plants.[23] This means they can be replenished at a faster rate than the plant matter used for other biofuel biosynthesizers.
  • Cyanobacteria can be grown on non-arable land (land not used for farming).[22] This prevents competition between food sources and fuel sources.[22]
  • The supplements necessary for the growth of cyanobacteria are CO2, H2O, and sunlight.[23] This presents two advantages:
    • Because CO2 is derived from the atmosphere, cyanobacteria do not need plant matter to synthesize isobutanol (in other organisms which synthesize isobutanol, plant matter is the source of the carbon necessary to synthetically assemble isobutanol).[23] Since plant matter is not used by this method of isobutanol production, the necessity to source plant matter from food sources and create a food-fuel price relationship is avoided.[22]
    • Because CO2 is absorbed from the atmosphere by cyanobacteria, the possibility of bioremediation (in the form of cyanobacteria removing excess CO2 from the atmosphere) exists.[23]

The primary drawbacks of cyanobacteria are:

  • They are sensitive to environmental conditions when being grown. Cyanobacteria suffer greatly from sunlight of inappropriate wavelength and intensity, CO2 of inappropriate concentration, or H2O of inappropriate salinity, though a wealth of cyanobacteria are able to grow in brackish and marine waters. These factors are generally hard to control, and present a major obstacle in cyanobacterial production of isobutanol.[24]
  • Cyanobacteria bioreactors require high energy to operate. Cultures require constant mixing, and the harvesting of biosynthetic products is energy-intensive. This reduces the efficiency of isobutanol production via cyanobacteria.[24]

Cyanobacteria can be re-engineered to increase their butanol production, showing the importance of ATP and cofactor driving forces as a design principle in pathway engineering. Many organisms have the capacity to produce butanol utilizing an acetyl-CoA dependent pathway. The main problem with this pathway is the first reaction involving the condensation of two acetyl-CoA molecules to acetoacetyl-CoA. This reaction is thermodynamically unfavorable due to the positive Gibbs free energy associated with it (dG = 6.8 kcal/mol).[25][26]

Bacillus subtilis edit

Bacillus subtilis is a gram-positive rod-shaped bacteria. Bacillus subtilis offers many of the same advantages and disadvantages of E. coli, but it is less prominently used and does not produce isobutanol in quantities as large as E. coli.[10] Similar to E. coli, B. subtilis is capable of producing isobutanol from lignocellulose, and is easily manipulated by common genetic techniques.[10] Elementary mode analysis has also been used to improve the isobutanol-synthesis metabolic pathway used by B. subtilis, leading to higher yields of isobutanol being produced.[27]

Saccharomyces cerevisiae edit

Saccharomyces cerevisiae, or S. cerevisiae, is a species of yeast. It naturally produces isobutanol in small quantities via its valine biosynthetic pathway.[28] S. cerevisiae is an ideal candidate for isobutanol biofuel production for several reasons:

  • S. cerevisiae can be grown at low pH levels, helping prevent contamination during growth in industrial bioreactors.[10]
  • S. cerevisiae cannot be affected by bacteriophages because it is a eukaryote.[10]
  • Extensive scientific knowledge about S. cerevisiae and its biology already exists.[10]

Overexpression of the enzymes in the valine biosynthetic pathway of S. cerevisiae has been used to improve isobutanol yields.[28][29][30] S. cerevisiae, however, has proved difficult to work with because of its inherent biology:

  • As a eukaryote, S. cerevisiae is genetically more complex than E. coli or B. subtilis, and is harder to genetically manipulate as a result.[10]
  • S. cerevisiae has the natural ability to produce ethanol. This natural ability can "overpower" and consequently inhibit isobutanol production by S. cerevisiae.[10]
  • S. cerevisiae cannot use five-carbon sugars to produce isobutanol. The inability to use five-carbon sugars restricts S. cerevisiae from using lignocellulose, and means S. cerevisiae must use plant matter intended for human consumption to produce isobutanol. This results in an unfavorable food/fuel price relationship when isobutanol is produced by S. cerevisiae.[10]

Ralstonia eutropha edit

Cupriavidus necator (=Ralstonia eutropha) is a Gram-negative soil bacterium of the class Betaproteobacteria. It is capable of indirectly converting electrical energy into isobutanol. This conversion is completed in several steps:[31]

  • Anodes are placed in a mixture of H2O and CO2.
  • An electric current is run through the anodes, and through an electrochemical process H2O and CO2 are combined to synthesize formic acid.
  • A culture of C. necator (composed of a strain tolerant to electricity) is kept within the H2O and CO2 mixture.
  • The culture of C. necator then converts formic acid from the mixture into isobutanol.
  • The biosynthesized isobutanol is then separated from the mixture, and can be used as a biofuel.

Feedstocks edit

High cost of raw material is considered as one of the main obstacles to commercial production of butanols. Using inexpensive and abundant feedstocks, e.g., corn stover, could enhance the process economic viability.[32]

Metabolic engineering can be used to allow an organism to use a cheaper substrate such as glycerol instead of glucose. Because fermentation processes require glucose derived from foods, butanol production can negatively impact food supply (see food vs fuel debate). Glycerol is a good alternative source for butanol production. While glucose sources are valuable and limited, glycerol is abundant and has a low market price because it is a waste product of biodiesel production. Butanol production from glycerol is economically viable using metabolic pathways that exist in the bacterium Clostridium pasteurianum.[33]

Improving efficiency edit

A process called cloud point separation could allow the recovery of butanol with high efficiency.[34]

Producers and distribution edit

DuPont and BP plan to make biobutanol the first product of their joint effort to develop, produce, and market next-generation biofuels.[35] In Europe the Swiss company Butalco[36] is developing genetically modified yeasts for the production of biobutanol from cellulosic materials. Gourmet Butanol, a United States-based company, is developing a process that utilizes fungi to convert organic waste into biobutanol.[37][38] Celtic Renewables makes biobutanol from waste that results from the production of whisky, and low-grade potatoes.

Properties of common fuels edit

Isobutanol edit

Isobutanol is a second-generation biofuel with several qualities that resolve issues presented by ethanol.[10]

Isobutanol's properties make it an attractive biofuel:

  • relatively high energy density, 98% of that of gasoline.[39]
  • does not readily absorb water from air, preventing the corrosion of engines and pipelines.[10]
  • can be mixed at any proportion with gasoline,[40] meaning the fuel can "drop into" the existing petroleum infrastructure as a replacement fuel or major additive.[10]
  • can be produced from plant matter not connected to food supplies, preventing a fuel-price/food-price relationship.[10][11][12][27]
  • assuming that it is produced from residual lignocellulosic feedstocks, blending isobutanol with gasoline may reduce GHG emissions considerably.[41]

n-Butanol edit

Butanol better tolerates water contamination and is less corrosive than ethanol and more suitable for distribution through existing pipelines for gasoline.[15] In blends with diesel or gasoline, butanol is less likely to separate from this fuel than ethanol if the fuel is contaminated with water.[15] There is also a vapor pressure co-blend synergy with butanol and gasoline containing ethanol, which facilitates ethanol blending. This facilitates storage and distribution of blended fuels.[15][42][43]

Fuel Energy
density
Air-fuel
ratio
Specific
energy
Heat of
vaporization
RON MON AKI
Gasoline and biogasoline 32 MJ/L 14.7 2.9 MJ/kg air 0.36 MJ/kg   91–99   81–89   87-95
Butanol fuel 29.2 MJ/L 11.1 3.6 MJ/kg air 0.43 MJ/kg   96   78   87
Anhydrous Ethanol fuel 19.6 MJ/L   9.0 3.0 MJ/kg air 0.92 MJ/kg 107   89   98
Methanol fuel 16 MJ/L   6.4 3.1 MJ/kg air 1.2 MJ/kg 106   92   99

The octane rating of n-butanol is similar to that of gasoline but lower than that of ethanol and methanol. n-Butanol has a RON (Research Octane number) of 96 and a MON (Motor octane number) of 78 (with a resulting "(R+M)/2 pump octane number" of 87, as used in North America) while t-butanol has octane ratings of 105 RON and 89 MON.[45] t-Butanol is used as an additive in gasoline but cannot be used as a fuel in its pure form because its relatively high melting point of 25.5 °C (79 °F) causes it to gel and solidify near room temperature. On the other hand, isobutanol has a lower melting point than n-butanol and favorable RON of 113 and MON of 94, and is thus much better suited to high fraction gasoline blends, blends with n-butanol, or as a standalone fuel.[46]

A fuel with a higher octane rating is less prone to knocking (extremely rapid and spontaneous combustion by compression) and the control system of any modern car engine can take advantage of this by adjusting the ignition timing. This will improve energy efficiency, leading to a better fuel economy than the comparisons of energy content different fuels indicate. By increasing the compression ratio, further gains in fuel economy, power and torque can be achieved. Conversely, a fuel with lower octane rating is more prone to knocking and will lower efficiency. Knocking can also cause engine damage. Engines designed to run on 87 octane will not have any additional power/fuel economy from being operated with higher octane fuel.

Butanol characteristics: air-fuel ratio, specific energy, viscosity, specific heat edit

Alcohol fuels, including butanol and ethanol, are partially oxidized and therefore need to run at richer mixtures than gasoline. Standard gasoline engines in cars can adjust the air-fuel ratio to accommodate variations in the fuel, but only within certain limits depending on model. If the limit is exceeded by running the engine on pure ethanol or a gasoline blend with a high percentage of ethanol, the engine will run lean, something which can critically damage components. Compared to ethanol, butanol can be mixed in higher ratios with gasoline for use in existing cars without the need for retrofit as the air-fuel ratio and energy content are closer to that of gasoline.[42][43]

Alcohol fuels have less energy per unit weight and unit volume than gasoline. To make it possible to compare the net energy released per cycle a measure called the fuels specific energy is sometimes used. It is defined as the energy released per air fuel ratio. The net energy released per cycle is higher for butanol than ethanol or methanol and about 10% higher than for gasoline.[47]

Substance Kinematic
viscosity
at 20 °C
Butanol 3.64 cSt
Diesel >3 cSt
Ethanol 1.52 cSt
Water 1.0 cSt
Methanol 0.64 cSt
Gasoline 0.4–0.8 cSt

The viscosity of alcohols increase with longer carbon chains. For this reason, butanol is used as an alternative to shorter alcohols when a more viscous solvent is desired. The kinematic viscosity of butanol is several times higher than that of gasoline and about as viscous as high quality diesel fuel.[48]

The fuel in an engine has to be vaporized before it will burn. Insufficient vaporization is a known problem with alcohol fuels during cold starts in cold weather. As the heat of vaporization of butanol is less than half of that of ethanol, an engine running on butanol should be easier to start in cold weather than one running on ethanol or methanol.[42]

Butanol fuel mixtures edit

Standards for the blending of ethanol and methanol in gasoline exist in many countries, including the EU, the US, and Brazil. Approximate equivalent butanol blends can be calculated from the relations between the stoichiometric fuel-air ratio of butanol, ethanol and gasoline. Common ethanol fuel mixtures for fuel sold as gasoline currently range from 5% to 10%. It is estimated that around 9.5 gigaliter (Gl) of gasoline can be saved and about 64.6 Gl of butanol-gasoline blend 16% (Bu16) can potentially be produced from corn residues in the US, which is equivalent to 11.8% of total domestic gasoline consumption.[32]

Consumer acceptance may be limited due to the potentially offensive banana-like smell of n-butanol.[49] Plans are underway to market a fuel that is 85% ethanol and 15% butanol (E85B), so existing E85 internal combustion engines can run on a 100% renewable fuel that could be made without using any fossil fuels. Because its longer hydrocarbon chain causes it to be fairly non-polar, it is more similar to gasoline than it is to ethanol. Butanol has been demonstrated to work in vehicles designed for use with gasoline without modification.

Butanol in vehicles edit

Currently no production vehicle is known to be approved by the manufacturer for use with 100% butanol. As of early 2009, only a few vehicles are approved for even using E85 fuel (i.e. 85% ethanol + 15% gasoline) in the USA. However, in Brazil all vehicle manufacturers (Fiat, Ford, VW, GM, Toyota, Honda, Peugeot, Citroen and others) produce "flex-fuel" vehicles that can run on 100% Gasoline and or any mix of ethanol and gasoline up to 85% ethanol (E85). These flex fuel cars represent 90% of the sales of personal vehicles in Brazil, in 2009. BP and DuPont, engaged in a joint venture to produce and promote butanol fuel, claim[15] that "biobutanol can be blended up to 10%v/v in European gasoline and 11.5%v/v in US gasoline".[50][51] In the 2009 Petit Le Mans race, the No. 16 Lola B09/86 - Mazda MZR-R of Dyson Racing ran on a mixture of biobutanol and ethanol developed by team technology partner BP.

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Biobutanol (EERE).
  • Biobutanol research news from Green Car Congress
  • Butanol 3D view and pdb-file

butanol, fuel, this, article, about, butanol, from, biomass, used, platform, chemical, fuel, other, alcohols, used, fuels, alcohol, fuel, butanol, used, fuel, internal, combustion, engine, more, similar, gasoline, than, ethanol, hydrocarbon, butanol, drop, fue. This article is about Butanol from biomass used as a platform chemical and fuel For other alcohols used as fuels see Alcohol fuel Butanol may be used as a fuel in an internal combustion engine It is more similar to gasoline than it is to ethanol A C4 hydrocarbon butanol is a drop in fuel and thus works in vehicles designed for use with gasoline without modification 1 Both n butanol and isobutanol have been studied as possible fuels Both can be produced from biomass as biobutanol 2 3 4 as well as from fossil fuels as petrobutanol 5 The chemical properties depend on the isomer n butanol or isobutanol not on the production method Butanol a C 4 hydrocarbon is a promising bio derived fuel which shares many properties with gasoline Contents 1 Genetically modified organisms 1 1 Escherichia coli 1 2 Clostridia 1 3 Cyanobacteria 1 4 Bacillus subtilis 1 5 Saccharomyces cerevisiae 1 6 Ralstonia eutropha 2 Feedstocks 2 1 Improving efficiency 3 Producers and distribution 4 Properties of common fuels 4 1 Isobutanol 4 2 n Butanol 4 2 1 Butanol characteristics air fuel ratio specific energy viscosity specific heat 4 2 2 Butanol fuel mixtures 4 2 3 Butanol in vehicles 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksGenetically modified organisms editObtaining higher yields of butanol involves manipulation of the metabolic networks using metabolic engineering and genetic engineering 6 7 While significant progress has been made fermentation pathways for producing butanol remain inefficient Titer and yields are low and separation is very expensive As such microbial production of butanol is not cost competitive relative to petroleum derived butanol 8 Although unproven commercially combining electrochemical and microbial production methods may offer a way to produce butanol from sustainable sources 9 Escherichia coli edit Escherichia coli or E coli is a Gram negative rod shaped bacterium E coli is the microorganism most likely to move on to commercial production of isobutanol 10 In its engineered form E coli produces the highest yields of isobutanol of any microorganism citation needed Methods such as elementary mode analysis have been used to improve the metabolic efficiency of E coli so that larger quantities of isobutanol may be produced 11 E coli is an ideal isobutanol bio synthesizer for several reasons E coli is an organism for which several tools of genetic manipulation exist and it is an organism for which an extensive body of scientific literature exists 10 This wealth of knowledge allows E coli to be easily modified by scientists E coli has the capacity to use lignocellulose waste plant matter left over from agriculture in the synthesis of isobutanol The use of lignocellulose prevents E coli from using plant matter meant for human consumption and prevents any food fuel price relationship which would occur from the biosynthesis of isobutanol by E coli 10 Genetic modification has been used to broaden the scope of lignocellulose which can be used by E coli This has made E coli a useful and diverse isobutanol bio synthesizer 12 The primary drawback of E coli is that it is susceptible to bacteriophages when being grown This susceptibility could potentially shut down entire bioreactors 10 Furthermore the native reaction pathway for isobutanol in E coli functions optimally at a limited concentration of isobutanol in the cell To minimize the sensitivity of E coli in high concentrations mutants of the enzymes involved in synthesis can be generated by random mutagenesis By chance some mutants may prove to be more tolerant of isobutanol which will enhance the overall yield of the synthesis 13 Clostridia edit n Butanol can be produced by fermentation of biomass by the A B E process using Clostridium acetobutylicum Clostridium beijerinckii C acetobutylicum was once used for the production of acetone from starch The butanol was a by product of fermentation twice as much butanol was produced The feedstocks for biobutanol are the same as those for ethanol energy crops such as sugar beets sugar cane corn grain wheat and cassava prospective non food energy crops such as switchgrass and even guayule in North America as well as agricultural byproducts such as bagasse straw and corn stalks 14 According to DuPont existing bioethanol plants can cost effectively be retrofitted to biobutanol production 15 Additionally butanol production from biomass and agricultural byproducts could be more efficient i e unit engine motive power delivered per unit solar energy consumed than ethanol or methanol production 16 A strain of Clostridium can convert nearly any form of cellulose into butanol even in the presence of oxygen 17 A strain of Clostridium cellulolyticum a native cellulose degrading microbe affords isobutanol directly from cellulose 18 A combination of succinate and ethanol can be fermented to produce butyrate a precursor to butanol fuel by utilizing the metabolic pathways present in Clostridium kluyveri Succinate is an intermediate of the TCA cycle which metabolizes glucose Anaerobic bacteria such as Clostridium acetobutylicum and Clostridium saccharobutylicum also contain these pathways Succinate is first activated and then reduced by a two step reaction to give 4 hydroxybutyrate which is then metabolized further to crotonyl coenzyme A CoA Crotonyl CoA is then converted to butyrate The genes corresponding to these butanol production pathways from Clostridium were cloned to E coli 19 Cyanobacteria edit Cyanobacteria are a phylum of photosynthetic bacteria 20 They are suited for isobutanol biosynthesis when genetically engineered to produce isobutanol and its corresponding aldehydes 21 Isobutanol producing species of cyanobacteria offer several advantages as biofuel synthesizers Cyanobacteria grow faster than plants 22 and also absorb sunlight more efficiently than plants 23 This means they can be replenished at a faster rate than the plant matter used for other biofuel biosynthesizers Cyanobacteria can be grown on non arable land land not used for farming 22 This prevents competition between food sources and fuel sources 22 The supplements necessary for the growth of cyanobacteria are CO2 H2O and sunlight 23 This presents two advantages Because CO2 is derived from the atmosphere cyanobacteria do not need plant matter to synthesize isobutanol in other organisms which synthesize isobutanol plant matter is the source of the carbon necessary to synthetically assemble isobutanol 23 Since plant matter is not used by this method of isobutanol production the necessity to source plant matter from food sources and create a food fuel price relationship is avoided 22 Because CO2 is absorbed from the atmosphere by cyanobacteria the possibility of bioremediation in the form of cyanobacteria removing excess CO2 from the atmosphere exists 23 The primary drawbacks of cyanobacteria are They are sensitive to environmental conditions when being grown Cyanobacteria suffer greatly from sunlight of inappropriate wavelength and intensity CO2 of inappropriate concentration or H2O of inappropriate salinity though a wealth of cyanobacteria are able to grow in brackish and marine waters These factors are generally hard to control and present a major obstacle in cyanobacterial production of isobutanol 24 Cyanobacteria bioreactors require high energy to operate Cultures require constant mixing and the harvesting of biosynthetic products is energy intensive This reduces the efficiency of isobutanol production via cyanobacteria 24 Cyanobacteria can be re engineered to increase their butanol production showing the importance of ATP and cofactor driving forces as a design principle in pathway engineering Many organisms have the capacity to produce butanol utilizing an acetyl CoA dependent pathway The main problem with this pathway is the first reaction involving the condensation of two acetyl CoA molecules to acetoacetyl CoA This reaction is thermodynamically unfavorable due to the positive Gibbs free energy associated with it dG 6 8 kcal mol 25 26 Bacillus subtilis edit Bacillus subtilis is a gram positive rod shaped bacteria Bacillus subtilis offers many of the same advantages and disadvantages of E coli but it is less prominently used and does not produce isobutanol in quantities as large as E coli 10 Similar to E coli B subtilis is capable of producing isobutanol from lignocellulose and is easily manipulated by common genetic techniques 10 Elementary mode analysis has also been used to improve the isobutanol synthesis metabolic pathway used by B subtilis leading to higher yields of isobutanol being produced 27 Saccharomyces cerevisiae edit Saccharomyces cerevisiae or S cerevisiae is a species of yeast It naturally produces isobutanol in small quantities via its valine biosynthetic pathway 28 S cerevisiae is an ideal candidate for isobutanol biofuel production for several reasons S cerevisiae can be grown at low pH levels helping prevent contamination during growth in industrial bioreactors 10 S cerevisiae cannot be affected by bacteriophages because it is a eukaryote 10 Extensive scientific knowledge about S cerevisiae and its biology already exists 10 Overexpression of the enzymes in the valine biosynthetic pathway of S cerevisiae has been used to improve isobutanol yields 28 29 30 S cerevisiae however has proved difficult to work with because of its inherent biology As a eukaryote S cerevisiae is genetically more complex than E coli or B subtilis and is harder to genetically manipulate as a result 10 S cerevisiae has the natural ability to produce ethanol This natural ability can overpower and consequently inhibit isobutanol production by S cerevisiae 10 S cerevisiae cannot use five carbon sugars to produce isobutanol The inability to use five carbon sugars restricts S cerevisiae from using lignocellulose and means S cerevisiae must use plant matter intended for human consumption to produce isobutanol This results in an unfavorable food fuel price relationship when isobutanol is produced by S cerevisiae 10 Ralstonia eutropha edit Cupriavidus necator Ralstonia eutropha is a Gram negative soil bacterium of the class Betaproteobacteria It is capable of indirectly converting electrical energy into isobutanol This conversion is completed in several steps 31 Anodes are placed in a mixture of H2O and CO2 An electric current is run through the anodes and through an electrochemical process H2O and CO2 are combined to synthesize formic acid A culture of C necator composed of a strain tolerant to electricity is kept within the H2O and CO2 mixture The culture of C necator then converts formic acid from the mixture into isobutanol The biosynthesized isobutanol is then separated from the mixture and can be used as a biofuel Feedstocks editHigh cost of raw material is considered as one of the main obstacles to commercial production of butanols Using inexpensive and abundant feedstocks e g corn stover could enhance the process economic viability 32 Metabolic engineering can be used to allow an organism to use a cheaper substrate such as glycerol instead of glucose Because fermentation processes require glucose derived from foods butanol production can negatively impact food supply see food vs fuel debate Glycerol is a good alternative source for butanol production While glucose sources are valuable and limited glycerol is abundant and has a low market price because it is a waste product of biodiesel production Butanol production from glycerol is economically viable using metabolic pathways that exist in the bacterium Clostridium pasteurianum 33 Improving efficiency edit A process called cloud point separation could allow the recovery of butanol with high efficiency 34 Producers and distribution editDuPont and BP plan to make biobutanol the first product of their joint effort to develop produce and market next generation biofuels 35 In Europe the Swiss company Butalco 36 is developing genetically modified yeasts for the production of biobutanol from cellulosic materials Gourmet Butanol a United States based company is developing a process that utilizes fungi to convert organic waste into biobutanol 37 38 Celtic Renewables makes biobutanol from waste that results from the production of whisky and low grade potatoes Properties of common fuels editIsobutanol edit Isobutanol is a second generation biofuel with several qualities that resolve issues presented by ethanol 10 Isobutanol s properties make it an attractive biofuel relatively high energy density 98 of that of gasoline 39 does not readily absorb water from air preventing the corrosion of engines and pipelines 10 can be mixed at any proportion with gasoline 40 meaning the fuel can drop into the existing petroleum infrastructure as a replacement fuel or major additive 10 can be produced from plant matter not connected to food supplies preventing a fuel price food price relationship 10 11 12 27 assuming that it is produced from residual lignocellulosic feedstocks blending isobutanol with gasoline may reduce GHG emissions considerably 41 n Butanol edit Butanol better tolerates water contamination and is less corrosive than ethanol and more suitable for distribution through existing pipelines for gasoline 15 In blends with diesel or gasoline butanol is less likely to separate from this fuel than ethanol if the fuel is contaminated with water 15 There is also a vapor pressure co blend synergy with butanol and gasoline containing ethanol which facilitates ethanol blending This facilitates storage and distribution of blended fuels 15 42 43 Fuel Energydensity Air fuelratio Specificenergy Heat ofvaporization RON MON AKIGasoline and biogasoline 32 MJ L 14 7 2 9 MJ kg air 0 36 MJ kg 91 99 81 89 87 95Butanol fuel 29 2 MJ L 11 1 3 6 MJ kg air 0 43 MJ kg 96 78 87Anhydrous Ethanol fuel 19 6 MJ L 9 0 3 0 MJ kg air 0 92 MJ kg 107 89 98Methanol fuel 16 MJ L 6 4 3 1 MJ kg air 1 2 MJ kg 106 92 99The octane rating of n butanol is similar to that of gasoline but lower than that of ethanol and methanol n Butanol has a RON Research Octane number of 96 and a MON Motor octane number of 78 with a resulting R M 2 pump octane number of 87 as used in North America while t butanol has octane ratings of 105 RON and 89 MON 45 t Butanol is used as an additive in gasoline but cannot be used as a fuel in its pure form because its relatively high melting point of 25 5 C 79 F causes it to gel and solidify near room temperature On the other hand isobutanol has a lower melting point than n butanol and favorable RON of 113 and MON of 94 and is thus much better suited to high fraction gasoline blends blends with n butanol or as a standalone fuel 46 A fuel with a higher octane rating is less prone to knocking extremely rapid and spontaneous combustion by compression and the control system of any modern car engine can take advantage of this by adjusting the ignition timing This will improve energy efficiency leading to a better fuel economy than the comparisons of energy content different fuels indicate By increasing the compression ratio further gains in fuel economy power and torque can be achieved Conversely a fuel with lower octane rating is more prone to knocking and will lower efficiency Knocking can also cause engine damage Engines designed to run on 87 octane will not have any additional power fuel economy from being operated with higher octane fuel Butanol characteristics air fuel ratio specific energy viscosity specific heat edit Alcohol fuels including butanol and ethanol are partially oxidized and therefore need to run at richer mixtures than gasoline Standard gasoline engines in cars can adjust the air fuel ratio to accommodate variations in the fuel but only within certain limits depending on model If the limit is exceeded by running the engine on pure ethanol or a gasoline blend with a high percentage of ethanol the engine will run lean something which can critically damage components Compared to ethanol butanol can be mixed in higher ratios with gasoline for use in existing cars without the need for retrofit as the air fuel ratio and energy content are closer to that of gasoline 42 43 Alcohol fuels have less energy per unit weight and unit volume than gasoline To make it possible to compare the net energy released per cycle a measure called the fuels specific energy is sometimes used It is defined as the energy released per air fuel ratio The net energy released per cycle is higher for butanol than ethanol or methanol and about 10 higher than for gasoline 47 Substance Kinematicviscosityat 20 CButanol 3 64 cStDiesel gt 3 cStEthanol 1 52 cStWater 1 0 cStMethanol 0 64 cStGasoline 0 4 0 8 cStThe viscosity of alcohols increase with longer carbon chains For this reason butanol is used as an alternative to shorter alcohols when a more viscous solvent is desired The kinematic viscosity of butanol is several times higher than that of gasoline and about as viscous as high quality diesel fuel 48 The fuel in an engine has to be vaporized before it will burn Insufficient vaporization is a known problem with alcohol fuels during cold starts in cold weather As the heat of vaporization of butanol is less than half of that of ethanol an engine running on butanol should be easier to start in cold weather than one running on ethanol or methanol 42 Butanol fuel mixtures edit Standards for the blending of ethanol and methanol in gasoline exist in many countries including the EU the US and Brazil Approximate equivalent butanol blends can be calculated from the relations between the stoichiometric fuel air ratio of butanol ethanol and gasoline Common ethanol fuel mixtures for fuel sold as gasoline currently range from 5 to 10 It is estimated that around 9 5 gigaliter Gl of gasoline can be saved and about 64 6 Gl of butanol gasoline blend 16 Bu16 can potentially be produced from corn residues in the US which is equivalent to 11 8 of total domestic gasoline consumption 32 Consumer acceptance may be limited due to the potentially offensive banana like smell of n butanol 49 Plans are underway to market a fuel that is 85 ethanol and 15 butanol E85B so existing E85 internal combustion engines can run on a 100 renewable fuel that could be made without using any fossil fuels Because its longer hydrocarbon chain causes it to be fairly non polar it is more similar to gasoline than it is to ethanol Butanol has been demonstrated to work in vehicles designed for use with gasoline without modification Butanol in vehicles edit Currently no production vehicle is known to be approved by the manufacturer for use with 100 butanol As of early 2009 only a few vehicles are approved for even using E85 fuel i e 85 ethanol 15 gasoline in the USA However in Brazil all vehicle manufacturers Fiat Ford VW GM Toyota Honda Peugeot Citroen and others produce flex fuel vehicles that can run on 100 Gasoline and or any mix of ethanol and gasoline up to 85 ethanol E85 These flex fuel cars represent 90 of the sales of personal vehicles in Brazil in 2009 BP and DuPont engaged in a joint venture to produce and promote butanol fuel claim 15 that biobutanol can be blended up to 10 v v in European gasoline and 11 5 v v in US gasoline 50 51 In the 2009 Petit Le Mans race the No 16 Lola B09 86 Mazda MZR R of Dyson Racing ran on a mixture of biobutanol and ethanol developed by team technology partner BP See also edit nbsp Energy portal nbsp Renewable energy portalAlcohol to jet fuel Air fuel ratio Bioalcohol Biofuel Biodiesel Biohydrogen Bioconversion of biomass to mixed alcohol fuels Butanol Catalyst Dimethyl ether Distillation Emission standards Energy crop Ethanol fuel Formic acid can be used as an intermediary to produce isobutanol from CO2 using microbes 52 53 54 Gevo Biofuels Industrial fermentation List of vegetable oils used for biofuelReferences edit ButylFuel LLC Retrieved 2008 01 29 Sampa Maiti et al December 10 2015 Quest for sustainable bio production and recovery of butanol as a promising solution to fossil fuel Energy Research 40 4 411 438 doi 10 1002 er 3458 S2CID 101240621 Alternative Fuels and Advanced Vehicles Data Center Biobutanol Cobalt Biofuels Biobutanol and Beyond Archived from the original on 2008 10 25 Retrieved 2008 10 27 Atsumi Shota Hanai Taizo Liao James C 2008 Non fermentative pathways for synthesis of branched chain higher alcohols as biofuels Nature 451 7174 86 89 Bibcode 2008Natur 451 86A doi 10 1038 nature06450 PMID 18172501 S2CID 4413113 Berezina OV Zakharova NV Yarotsky SV Zverlov VV December 2012 Microbial producers of butanol Applied Biochemistry and Microbiology 48 7 625 638 doi 10 1134 S0003683812070022 S2CID 254189557 The Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology KAIST October 23 2012 Highly Efficient Production of Advanced Biofuel by Metabolically Engineered Microorganism ScienceDaily Veettil SI Kumar L Koukoulas AA 2016 Can Microbially derived advanced biofuels ever compete with conventional bioethanol A critical review BioResources 11 4 10711 10755 doi 10 15376 biores 11 4 Veettil Li H Opgenorth PH Wernick DG Rogers S Wu TY Higashide W Malati P Huo YX Cho KM Liao JC March 29 2012 Integrated Electromicrobial Conversion of CO2 to Higher Alcohols Science 335 6076 1596 Bibcode 2012Sci 335 1596L doi 10 1126 science 1217643 PMID 22461604 S2CID 24328552 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Peralta Yahya PP Zhang F del Cardayre SB Keasling JD August 15 2012 Microbial engineering for the production of advanced biofuels Nature 488 7411 320 328 Bibcode 2012Natur 488 320P doi 10 1038 nature11478 PMID 22895337 S2CID 4423203 a b Trinh Cong T June 9 2012 Elucidating and reprogramming Escherichia coli metabolisms for obligate anaerobic n butanol and isobutanol production Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology 95 4 1083 1094 doi 10 1007 s00253 012 4197 7 PMID 22678028 S2CID 10586770 a b Nakashima N Tamura T July 1 2012 A new carbon catabolite repression mutation of Escherichia coli mlc and its use for producing isobutanol Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering 114 1 38 44 doi 10 1016 j jbiosc 2012 02 029 PMID 22561880 Chong Huiqing Geng Hefang Zhang Hongfang Song Hao Huang Lei Jiang Rongrong November 6 2013 Enhancing E coli isobutanol tolerance through engineering its global transcription factor cAMP receptor protein CRP Biotechnology and Bioengineering 111 4 700 708 doi 10 1002 bit 25134 ISSN 0006 3592 PMID 24203355 S2CID 28120139 Ars Publication Request Butanol Production From Agricultural Biomass a b c d e biobutanol fact sheet PDF BP and DuPont Archived from the original PDF on 2009 01 21 Retrieved 2009 05 13 Washington University in St Louis January 28 2008 New Techniques Create Butanol A Superior Biofuel ScienceDaily Novel bacterium produces butanol directly from cellulose Green Car Congress August 28 2011 Retrieved 2012 11 17 Higashide Wendy Li Yongchao Yang Yunfeng Liao James C April 15 2011 Metabolic Engineering of Clostridium cellulolyticum for Production of Isobutanol 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PMID 23183979 a b Singh NK Dhar DW March 11 2011 Microalgae as second generation biofuel A review PDF Agronomy for Sustainable Development 31 4 605 629 doi 10 1007 s13593 011 0018 0 S2CID 38589348 Stern JR Coon MJ Delcampillo A 1953 Acetoacetyl coenzyme a as intermediate in the enzymatic breakdown and synthesis of acetoacetate J Am Chem Soc 75 6 1517 1518 doi 10 1021 ja01102a540 Lan EI Liao JC 2012 ATP drives direct photosynthetic production of 1 butanol in cyanobacteria Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 109 16 6018 6023 Bibcode 2012PNAS 109 6018L doi 10 1073 pnas 1200074109 PMC 3341080 PMID 22474341 a b Li S Huang D Li Y Wen J Jia X January 1 2012 Rational improvement of the engineered isobutanol producing Bacillus subtilis by elementary mode analysis Microbial Cell Factories 11 1 101 doi 10 1186 1475 2859 11 101 PMC 3475101 PMID 22862776 a b Kondo T Tezuka H Ishii J Matsuda F Ogino C Kondo A May 1 2012 Genetic engineering to enhance the 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07 09 Maine college wins EPA grant for food waste to fuel research Biomassmagazine com Lu J Brigham CJ Gai CS Sinskey AJ August 4 2012 Studies on the production of branched chain alcohols in engineered Ralstonia eutropha PDF Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology 96 1 283 297 doi 10 1007 s00253 012 4320 9 hdl 1721 1 75742 PMID 22864971 S2CID 62337 Ting CNW Wu J Takahashi K Endo A Zhao H September 8 2012 Screened Butanol Tolerant Enterococcus faecium Capable of Butanol Production Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology 168 6 1672 1680 doi 10 1007 s12010 012 9888 0 PMID 22961352 S2CID 9201136 Wojcieszyk M Knuutila L Kroyan Y de Pinto Balsemao M Tripathi R Keskivali J Karvo A Santasalo Aarnio A Blomstedt O Larmi M January 2021 Performance of Anisole and Isobutanol as Gasoline Bio Blendstocks for Spark Ignition Engines Sustainability 13 16 8729 doi 10 3390 su13168729 a b c J L Smith J P Workman December 20 2007 Alcohol for Motor Fuels Colorado State University Archived from the original on 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links editBiobutanol EERE Biobutanol research news from Green Car Congress Butanol 3D view and pdb file Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Butanol fuel amp oldid 1207471211, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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