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Wikipedia

Ethanol fuel

Ethanol fuel is fuel containing ethyl alcohol, the same type of alcohol as found in alcoholic beverages. It is most often used as a motor fuel, mainly as a biofuel additive for gasoline.

Summary of the main ethanol blends used around the world in 2013
Corn vs Ethanol production in the United States
  Total corn production (bushels) (left)
  Corn used for Ethanol fuel (bushels) (left)
  Percent of corn used for Ethanol (right)
The Saab 9-3 SportCombi BioPower was the second E85 flexifuel model introduced by Saab in the Swedish market.

Several common ethanol fuel mixtures are in use around the world. The use of pure hydrous or anhydrous ethanol in internal combustion engines (ICEs) is only possible if the engines are designed or modified for that purpose. Anhydrous ethanol can be blended with gasoline (petrol) for use in gasoline engines, but with high ethanol content only after engine modifications to meter increased fuel volume since pure ethanol contains only 2/3 the energy of an equivalent volume of pure gasoline. High percentage ethanol mixtures are used in some racing engine applications as the very high octane rating of ethanol is compatible with very high compression ratios.

The first production car running entirely on ethanol was the Fiat 147, introduced in 1978 in Brazil by Fiat. Ethanol is commonly made from biomass such as corn or sugarcane. World ethanol production for transport fuel tripled between 2000 and 2007 from 17×109 liters (4.5×10^9 U.S. gal; 3.7×10^9 imp gal) to more than 52×109 liters (14×10^9 U.S. gal; 11×10^9 imp gal). From 2007 to 2008, the share of ethanol in global gasoline type fuel use increased from 3.7% to 5.4%.[1] In 2011 worldwide ethanol fuel production reached 8.46×109 liters (2.23×10^9 U.S. gal; 1.86×10^9 imp gal) with the United States of America and Brazil being the top producers, accounting for 62.2% and 25% of global production, respectively.[2] US ethanol production reached 57.54×109 liters (15.20×10^9 U.S. gal; 12.66×10^9 imp gal) in May 2017.[3]

Ethanol fuel has a "gasoline gallon equivalency" (GGE) value of 1.5, i.e. to replace the energy of 1 volume of gasoline, 1.5 times the volume of ethanol is needed.[4][5]

Ethanol-blended fuel is widely used in Brazil, the United States, and Europe (see also Ethanol fuel by country).[2] Most cars on the road today in the U.S. can run on blends of up to 15% ethanol,[6] and ethanol represented 10% of the U.S. gasoline fuel supply derived from domestic sources in 2011.[2] Some flexible-fuel vehicles are able to use up to 100% ethanol.

Since 1976 the Brazilian government has made it mandatory to blend ethanol with gasoline, and since 2007 the legal blend is around 25% ethanol and 75% gasoline (E25).[7] By December 2011 Brazil had a fleet of 14.8 million flex-fuel automobiles and light trucks[8][9] and 1.5 million flex-fuel motorcycles[10][11][12] that regularly use neat ethanol fuel (known as E100).

Bioethanol is a form of renewable energy that can be produced from agricultural feedstocks. It can be made from very common crops such as hemp, sugarcane, potato, cassava and corn. There has been considerable debate about how useful bioethanol is in replacing gasoline. Concerns about its production and use relate to increased food prices due to the large amount of arable land required for crops,[13] as well as the energy and pollution balance of the whole cycle of ethanol production, especially from corn.[14][15]

Chemistry

 
Structure of ethanol molecule. All bonds are single bonds.

During ethanol fermentation, glucose and other sugars in the corn (or sugarcane or other crops) are converted into ethanol and carbon dioxide.

C6H12O6 → 2 C2H5OH+ 2 CO2 + heat

Ethanol fermentation is not 100% selective with side products such as acetic acid and glycols. They are mostly removed during ethanol purification. Fermentation takes place in an aqueous solution. The resulting solution has an ethanol content of around 15%. Ethanol is subsequently isolated and purified by a combination of adsorption and distillation.

During combustion, ethanol reacts with oxygen to produce carbon dioxide, water, and heat:

C2H5OH + 3 O2 → 2 CO2 + 3 H2O + heat

Starch and cellulose molecules are strings of glucose molecules. It is also possible to generate ethanol out of cellulosic materials. That, however, requires a pretreatment that splits the cellulose into glucose molecules and other sugars that subsequently can be fermented. The resulting product is called cellulosic ethanol, indicating its source.

Ethanol is also produced industrially from ethylene by hydration of the double bond in the presence of a catalyst and high temperature.

C2H4 + H2O → C2H5OH

Most ethanol is produced by fermentation.

Sources

 
Sugar cane harvest
 
Cornfield in South Africa
 
Switchgrass

About 5% of the ethanol produced in the world in 2003 was actually a petroleum product.[16] It is made by the catalytic hydration of ethylene with sulfuric acid as the catalyst. It can also be obtained via ethylene or acetylene, from calcium carbide, coal, oil gas, and other sources. Two million short tons (1,786,000 long tons; 1,814,000 t) of petroleum-derived ethanol are produced annually. The principal suppliers are plants in the United States, Europe, and South Africa.[17] Petroleum derived ethanol (synthetic ethanol) is chemically identical to bio-ethanol and can be differentiated only by radiocarbon dating.[18]

Bio-ethanol is usually obtained from the conversion of carbon-based feedstock. Agricultural feedstocks are considered renewable because they get energy from the sun using photosynthesis, provided that all minerals required for growth (such as nitrogen and phosphorus) are returned to the land. Ethanol can be produced from a variety of feedstocks such as sugar cane, bagasse, miscanthus, sugar beet, sorghum, grain, switchgrass, barley, hemp, kenaf, potatoes, sweet potatoes, cassava, sunflower, fruit, molasses, corn, stover, grain, wheat, straw, cotton, other biomass, as well as many types of cellulose waste and harvesting, whichever has the best well-to-wheel assessment.

In 2008 an alternative process to produce bio-ethanol from algae was announced by the company Algenol. Rather than grow algae and then harvest and ferment it, the algae grow in sunlight and produce ethanol directly, which is removed without killing the algae. It is claimed the process can produce 6,000 U.S. gallons per acre (5,000 imperial gallons per acre; 56,000 liters per hectare) per year compared with 400 US gallons per acre (330 imp gal/acre; 3,700 L/ha) for corn production.[19] In 2015 the project was abandoned.[20]

Currently,[when?] the first generation processes for the production of ethanol from corn use only a small part of the corn plant: the corn kernels are taken from the corn plant and only the starch, which represents about 50% of the dry kernel mass, is transformed into ethanol. Two types of second generation processes are under development. The first type uses enzymes and yeast fermentation to convert the plant cellulose into ethanol while the second type uses pyrolysis to convert the whole plant to either a liquid bio-oil or a syngas. Second generation processes can also be used with plants such as grasses, wood or agricultural waste material such as straw.

Production

Although there are various ways ethanol fuel can be produced, the most common way is via fermentation.

The basic steps for large-scale production of ethanol are: microbial (yeast) fermentation of sugars, distillation, dehydration (requirements vary, see Ethanol fuel mixtures, below), and denaturing (optional). Prior to fermentation, some crops require saccharification or hydrolysis of carbohydrates such as cellulose and starch into sugars. Saccharification of cellulose is called cellulolysis (see cellulosic ethanol). Enzymes are used to convert starch into sugar.[21]

Fermentation

Ethanol is produced by microbial fermentation of the sugar. Microbial fermentation currently only works directly with sugars. Two major components of plants, starch and cellulose, are both made of sugars—and can, in principle, be converted to sugars for fermentation. Currently, only the sugar (e.g., sugar cane) and starch (e.g., corn) portions can be economically converted.

There is interest in cellulosic ethanol obtained from breaking down plant cellulose to sugars and converting the sugars to ethanol.[22] However, cellulosic ethanol is currently uneconomical and not practiced commercially. According to a 2006 International Energy Agency report, cellulosic ethanol could be important in the future.[23]

Distillation

 
Ethanol plant in West Burlington, Iowa
 
Ethanol plant in Sertãozinho, Brazil

For the ethanol to be usable as a fuel, the yeast solids and the majority of the water must be removed. After fermentation, the mash is heated so that the ethanol evaporates.[24] This process, known as distillation, separates the ethanol, but its purity is limited to 95–96% due to the formation of a low-boiling water-ethanol azeotrope with maximum (95.6% m/m (96.5% v/v) ethanol and 4.4% m/m (3.5% v/v) water). This mixture is called hydrous ethanol and can be used as a fuel alone, but unlike anhydrous ethanol, hydrous ethanol is not miscible in all ratios with gasoline, so the water fraction is typically removed in further treatment to burn in combination with gasoline in gasoline engines.[25]

Dehydration

There are three dehydration processes to remove the water from an azeotropic ethanol/water mixture. The first process, used in many early fuel ethanol plants, is called azeotropic distillation and consists of adding benzene or cyclohexane to the mixture. When these components are added to the mixture, it forms a heterogeneous azeotropic mixture in vapor–liquid-liquid equilibrium, which when distilled produces anhydrous ethanol in the column bottom, and a vapor mixture of water, ethanol, and cyclohexane/benzene.

When condensed, this becomes a two-phase liquid mixture. The heavier phase, poor in the entrainer (benzene or cyclohexane), is stripped of the entrainer and recycled to the feed—while the lighter phase, with condensate from the stripping, is recycled to the second column. Another early method, called extractive distillation, consists of adding a ternary component that increases ethanol's relative volatility. When the ternary mixture is distilled, it produces anhydrous ethanol on the top stream of the column.

With increasing attention being paid to saving energy, many methods have been proposed that avoid distillation altogether for dehydration. Of these methods, a third method has emerged and has been adopted by the majority of modern ethanol plants. This new process uses molecular sieves to remove water from fuel ethanol. In this process, ethanol vapor under pressure passes through a bed of molecular sieve beads. The bead's pores are sized to allow adsorption of water while excluding ethanol. After a period of time, the bed is regenerated under vacuum or in the flow of inert atmosphere (e.g. N2) to remove the adsorbed water. Two beds are often used so that one is available to adsorb water while the other is being regenerated. This dehydration technology can account for energy saving of 3,000 btus/gallon (840 kJ/L) compared to earlier azeotropic distillation.[26]

Recent research has demonstrated that complete dehydration prior to blending with gasoline is not always necessary. Instead, the azeotropic mixture can be blended directly with gasoline so that liquid-liquid phase equilibrium can assist in the elimination of water. A two-stage counter-current setup of mixer-settler tanks can achieve complete recovery of ethanol into the fuel phase, with minimal energy consumption.[27]

Post-production water issues

Ethanol is hygroscopic, meaning it absorbs water vapor directly from the atmosphere. Because absorbed water dilutes the fuel value of the ethanol and may cause phase separation of ethanol-gasoline blends (which causes engine stall), containers of ethanol fuels must be kept tightly sealed. This high miscibility with water means that ethanol cannot be efficiently shipped through modern pipelines, like liquid hydrocarbons, over long distances.[28]

The fraction of water that an ethanol-gasoline fuel can contain without phase separation increases with the percentage of ethanol.[29] For example, E30 can have up to about 2% water. If there is more than about 71% ethanol, the remainder can be any proportion of water or gasoline and phase separation does not occur. The fuel mileage declines with increased water content. The increased solubility of water with higher ethanol content permits E30 and hydrated ethanol to be put in the same tank since any combination of them always results in a single phase. Somewhat less water is tolerated at lower temperatures. For E10 it is about 0.5% v/v at 21 °C and decreases to about 0.23% v/v at −34 °C.[30]

Consumer production systems

While biodiesel production systems have been marketed to home and business users for many years, commercialized ethanol production systems designed for end-consumer use have lagged in the marketplace. In 2008, two different companies announced home-scale ethanol production systems. The AFS125 Advanced Fuel System[31] from Allard Research and Development is capable of producing both ethanol and biodiesel in one machine, while the E-100 MicroFueler[32] from E-Fuel Corporation is dedicated to ethanol only.

Engines

 
The first ethanol powered car, a Chrysler Dodge 1800, at Brazilian Aerospace Memorial [pt]

Fuel economy

Ethanol contains approximately 34% less energy per unit volume than gasoline, and therefore in theory, burning pure ethanol in a vehicle reduces range per unit measure by 34%, given the same fuel economy, compared to burning pure gasoline. However, since ethanol has a higher octane rating, the engine can be made more efficient by raising its compression ratio.[33][34]

For E10 (10% ethanol and 90% gasoline), the increase in fuel consumption in unmodified vehicles is small (up to 2.8%) when compared to conventional gasoline,[35] and even smaller (1–2%) when compared to oxygenated and reformulated blends.[36] For E85 (85% ethanol), the effect becomes significant. E85 produces lower mileage than gasoline, and requires more frequent refueling. Actual performance may vary depending on the vehicle. Based on EPA tests for all 2006 E85 models, the average fuel economy for E85 vehicles was 25.56% lower than unleaded gasoline.[37] The EPA-rated mileage of current United States flex-fuel vehicles[38] should be considered when making price comparisons, but E85 is a high performance fuel, with an octane rating of about 94–96, and should be compared to premium.[39] Ethanol is not suitable for most aircraft, according to the RACQ, as well as some motorbikes and small engines,[40] though the Embraer EMB 202 Ipanema is an example of an aircraft that has been specifically designed for use with ethanol fuel in some variants.

Cold start during the winter

 
The Brazilian 2008 Honda Civic flex-fuel has outside direct access to the secondary reservoir gasoline tank in the front right side; the corresponding fuel filler door is shown by the arrow.

High ethanol blends present a problem to achieve enough vapor pressure for the fuel to evaporate and spark the ignition during cold weather (since ethanol tends to increase fuel enthalpy of vaporization[41]). When vapor pressure is below 45 kPa starting a cold engine becomes difficult.[42] To avoid this problem at temperatures below 11 °C (52 °F), and to reduce ethanol higher emissions during cold weather, both the US and the European markets adopted E85 as the maximum blend to be used in their flexible fuel vehicles, and they are optimized to run at such a blend. At places with harsh cold weather, the ethanol blend in the US has a seasonal reduction to E70 for these very cold regions, though it is still sold as E85.[43][44] At places where temperatures fall below −12 °C (10 °F) during the winter, it is recommended to install an engine heater system, both for gasoline and E85 vehicles. Sweden has a similar seasonal reduction, but the ethanol content in the blend is reduced to E75 during the winter months.[44][45]

Brazilian flex fuel vehicles can operate with ethanol mixtures up to E100, which is hydrous ethanol (with up to 4% water), which causes vapor pressure to drop faster as compared to E85 vehicles. As a result, Brazilian flex vehicles are built with a small secondary gasoline reservoir located near the engine. During a cold start pure gasoline is injected to avoid starting problems at low temperatures. This provision is particularly necessary for users of Brazil's southern and central regions, where temperatures normally drop below 15 °C (59 °F) during the winter. An improved flex engine generation was launched in 2009 that eliminates the need for the secondary gas storage tank.[46][47] In March 2009 Volkswagen do Brasil launched the Polo E-Flex, the first Brazilian flex fuel model without an auxiliary tank for cold start.[48][49]

Fuel mixtures

 
Hydrated ethanol × gasoline type C price table for use in Brazil
 
EPA's E15 label required to be displayed in all E15 fuel dispensers in the U.S.

In many countries cars are mandated to run on mixtures of ethanol. All Brazilian light-duty vehicles are built to operate for an ethanol blend of up to 25% (E25), and since 1993 a federal law requires mixtures between 22% and 25% ethanol, with 25% required as of mid July 2011.[50] In the United States all light-duty vehicles are built to operate normally with an ethanol blend of 10% (E10). At the end of 2010 over 90 percent of all gasoline sold in the U.S. was blended with ethanol.[51] In January 2011 the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issued a waiver to authorize up to 15% of ethanol blended with gasoline (E15) to be sold only for cars and light pickup trucks with a model year of 2001 or newer.[52][53]

Beginning with the model year 1999, an increasing number of vehicles in the world are manufactured with engines that can run on any fuel from 0% ethanol up to 100% ethanol without modification. Many cars and light trucks (a class containing minivans, SUVs and pickup trucks) are designed to be flexible-fuel vehicles using ethanol blends up to 85% (E85) in North America and Europe, and up to 100% (E100) in Brazil. In older model years, their engine systems contained alcohol sensors in the fuel and/or oxygen sensors in the exhaust that provide input to the engine control computer to adjust the fuel injection to achieve stochiometric (no residual fuel or free oxygen in the exhaust) air-to-fuel ratio for any fuel mix. In newer models, the alcohol sensors have been removed, with the computer using only oxygen and airflow sensor feedback to estimate alcohol content. The engine control computer can also adjust (advance) the ignition timing to achieve a higher output without pre-ignition when it predicts that higher alcohol percentages are present in the fuel being burned. This method is backed up by advanced knock sensors – used in most high performance gasoline engines regardless of whether they are designed to use ethanol or not – that detect pre-ignition and detonation.

In June 2021, India brought forward to 2025 its target to implement a 20% ethanol-blended auto fuel. India's ethanol blending rate in fuel (at the time of this target revision) is 8%, which is set to increase to 10% by 2022 based on the 'Roadmap for ethanol blending in India 2020-25' released on 5 June (World Environment Day) by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The government expects oil marketing companies such as Indian Oil Corp (IOC) and Hindustan Petroleum Corp Ltd (HPCL) to provide 20% ethanol-blended fuel from April 2023 onward. States like Maharashtra and Uttar Pradesh, where ethanol is in surplus, are expected to be the first to adopt the higher ethanol fuel blending rate.[54][55] India is also prioritizing roll-out of vehicles compatible with ethanol-blended fuel. From March 2021, auto manufacturers are required to indicate the ethanol compatibility of new vehicles and engines must be optimally designed to use 20% ethanol-blended fuel. The government expects automakers to begin production of ethanol-blended fuel compliant vehicles before April 2022.[54] However, environmentalists worry that India's increased target for ethanol blending could incentivise water-intensive crops such as sugarcane and rice, and suggest that the government should focus on lower-water intensity crops such as millets since India is already facing an acute water shortage.[55]

Other engine configurations

ED95 engines

Since 1989 there have also been ethanol engines based on the diesel principle operating in Sweden.[56] They are used primarily in city buses, but also in distribution trucks and waste collectors. The engines, made by Scania, have a modified compression ratio, and the fuel (known as ED95) used is a mix of 93.6% ethanol and 3.6% ignition improver, and 2.8% denaturants.[57] The ignition improver makes it possible for the fuel to ignite in the diesel combustion cycle. It is then also possible to use the energy efficiency of the diesel principle with ethanol. These engines have been used in the United Kingdom by Reading Buses but the use of bioethanol fuel is now being phased out.

Dual-fuel direct-injection

A 2004 MIT study and an earlier paper published by the Society of Automotive Engineers identified a method to exploit the characteristics of fuel ethanol substantially more efficiently than mixing it with gasoline. The method presents the possibility of leveraging the use of alcohol to achieve definite improvement over the cost-effectiveness of hybrid electric. The improvement consists of using dual-fuel direct-injection of pure alcohol (or the azeotrope or E85) and gasoline, in any ratio up to 100% of either, in a turbocharged, high compression-ratio, small-displacement engine having performance similar to an engine having twice the displacement. Each fuel is carried separately, with a much smaller tank for alcohol. The high-compression (for higher efficiency) engine runs on ordinary gasoline under low-power cruise conditions. Alcohol is directly injected into the cylinders (and the gasoline injection simultaneously reduced) only when necessary to suppress 'knock' such as when significantly accelerating. Direct cylinder injection raises the already high octane rating of ethanol up to an effective 130. The calculated over-all reduction of gasoline use and CO2 emission is 30%. The consumer cost payback time shows a 4:1 improvement over turbo-diesel and a 5:1 improvement over hybrid. The problems of water absorption into pre-mixed gasoline (causing phase separation), supply issues of multiple mix ratios and cold-weather starting are also avoided.[58][59]

Increased thermal efficiency

In a 2008 study, complex engine controls and increased exhaust gas recirculation allowed a compression ratio of 19.5 with fuels ranging from neat ethanol to E50. Thermal efficiency up to approximately that for a diesel was achieved.[60] This would result in the fuel economy of a neat ethanol vehicle to be about the same as one burning gasoline.

Fuel cells powered by an ethanol reformer

In June 2016, Nissan announced plans to develop fuel cell vehicles powered by ethanol rather than hydrogen, the fuel of choice by the other car manufacturers that have developed and commercialized fuel cell vehicles, such as the Hyundai Tucson FCEV, Toyota Mirai, and Honda FCX Clarity. The main advantage of this technical approach is that it would be cheaper and easier to deploy the fueling infrastructure than setting up the one required to deliver hydrogen at high pressures, as each hydrogen fueling station cost US$1 million to US$2 million to build.[61]

Nissan plans to create a technology that uses liquid ethanol fuel as a source to generate hydrogen within the vehicle itself. The technology uses heat to reform ethanol into hydrogen to feed what is known as a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC). The fuel cell generates electricity to supply power to the electric motor driving the wheels, through a battery that handles peak power demands and stores regenerated energy. The vehicle would include a tank for a blend of water and ethanol, which is fed into an onboard reformer that splits it into pure hydrogen and carbon dioxide. According to Nissan, the liquid fuel could be an ethanol-water blend at a 55:45 ratio. Nissan expects to commercialize its technology by 2020.[61]

Experience by country

The world's top ethanol fuel producers in 2011 were the United States with 13.9×109 U.S. gallons (5.3×1010 liters; 1.16×1010 imperial gallons) and Brazil with 5.6×109 U.S. gallons (2.1×1010 liters; 4.7×109 imperial gallons), accounting together for 87.1% of world production of 22.36×109 U.S. gallons (8.46×1010 liters; 1.862×1010 imperial gallons).[2] Strong incentives, coupled with other industry development initiatives, are giving rise to fledgling ethanol industries in countries such as Germany, Spain, France, Sweden, China, Thailand, Canada, Colombia, India, Australia, and some Central American countries.

Annual fuel ethanol production by country
(2007–2011)[2][62][63][64]
Top 10 countries/regional blocks
(millions of U.S. liquid gallons per year)
World
rank
Country/region 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007
1   United States 13,900.00 13,231.00 10,938.00 9,235.00 6,485.00
2   Brazil 5,573.24 6,921.54 6,577.89 6,472.20 5,019.20
3   EU 1,199.31 1,176.88 1,039.52 733.60 570.30
4   China 554.76 541.55 541.55 501.90 486.00
5   Thailand 435.20 89.80 79.20
6   Canada 462.30 356.63 290.59 237.70 211.30
7   India 91.67 66.00 52.80
8   Colombia 83.21 79.30 74.90
9   Australia 87.20 66.04 56.80 26.40 26.40
10 Other 247.27
World Total 22,356.09 22,946.87 19,534.99 17,335.20 13,101.70

Environment

Energy balance

Energy balance[65]
Country Type Energy balance
United States Corn ethanol 1.3
Germany Biodiesel 2.5
Brazil Sugarcane ethanol 8
United States Cellulosic ethanol 2–36††

† experimental, not in commercial production

†† depending on production method

All biomass goes through at least some of these steps: it needs to be grown, collected, dried, fermented, distilled, and burned. All of these steps require resources and an infrastructure. The total amount of energy input into the process compared to the energy released by burning the resulting ethanol fuel is known as the energy balance (or "energy returned on energy invested"). Figures compiled in a 2007 report by National Geographic[65] point to modest results for corn ethanol produced in the US: one unit of fossil-fuel energy is required to create 1.3 energy units from the resulting ethanol. The energy balance for sugarcane ethanol produced in Brazil is more favorable, with one unit of fossil-fuel energy required to create 8 from the ethanol. Energy balance estimates are not easily produced, thus numerous such reports have been generated that are contradictory. For instance, a separate survey reports that production of ethanol from sugarcane, which requires a tropical climate to grow productively, returns from 8 to 9 units of energy for each unit expended, as compared to corn, which only returns about 1.34 units of fuel energy for each unit of energy expended.[66] A 2006 University of California Berkeley study, after analyzing six separate studies, concluded that producing ethanol from corn uses much less petroleum than producing gasoline.[67]

Carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, is emitted during fermentation and combustion. This is canceled out by the greater uptake of carbon dioxide by the plants as they grow to produce the biomass.[68] When produced by certain methods, ethanol releases less greenhouse gases than gasoline does.[69][70]

Air pollution

Compared with conventional unleaded gasoline, ethanol is a particulate-free burning fuel source that combusts with oxygen to form carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, water and aldehydes. The Clean Air Act requires the addition of oxygenates to reduce carbon monoxide emissions in the United States. The additive MTBE is currently being phased out due to ground water contamination, hence ethanol becomes an attractive alternative additive. Current production methods include air pollution from the manufacturer of macronutrient fertilizers such as ammonia.

A study by atmospheric scientists at Stanford University found that E85 fuel would increase the risk of air pollution deaths relative to gasoline by 9% in Los Angeles, US: a very large, urban, car-based metropolis that is a worst-case scenario.[71] Ozone levels are significantly increased, thereby increasing photochemical smog and aggravating medical problems such as asthma.[72][73]

Brazil burns significant amounts of ethanol biofuel. Gas chromatograph studies were performed of ambient air in São Paulo, Brazil, and compared to Osaka, Japan, which does not burn ethanol fuel. Atmospheric Formaldehyde was 160% higher in Brazil, and Acetaldehyde was 260% higher.[74][needs update]

Carbon dioxide

 
UK government calculation of carbon intensity of corn bioethanol grown in the US and burnt in the UK[75]
 
Graph of UK figures for the carbon intensity of bioethanol and fossil fuels. This graph assumes that all bioethanols are burnt in their country of origin and that previously existing cropland is used to grow the feedstock.[75]

The calculation of exactly how much carbon dioxide is produced in the manufacture of bioethanol is a complex and inexact process, and is highly dependent on the method by which the ethanol is produced and the assumptions made in the calculation. A calculation should include:

  • The cost of growing the feedstock
  • The cost of transporting the feedstock to the factory
  • The cost of processing the feedstock into bioethanol

Such a calculation may or may not consider the following effects:

  • The cost of the change in land use of the area where the fuel feedstock is grown.
  • The cost of transportation of the bioethanol from the factory to its point of use
  • The efficiency of the bioethanol compared with standard gasoline
  • The amount of carbon dioxide produced at the tail pipe.
  • The benefits due to the production of useful bi-products, such as cattle feed or electricity.

The graph on the right shows figures calculated by the UK government for the purposes of the Renewable transport fuel obligation.[75]

The January 2006 Science article from UC Berkeley's ERG, estimated reduction from corn ethanol in GHG to be 13% after reviewing a large number of studies. In a correction to that article released shortly after publication, they reduce the estimated value to 7.4%. A National Geographic overview article (2007)[65] puts the figures at 22% less CO2 emissions in production and use for corn ethanol compared to gasoline and a 56% reduction for cane ethanol. Carmaker Ford reports a 70% reduction in CO2 emissions with bioethanol compared to petrol for one of their flexible-fuel vehicles.[76]

An additional complication is that production requires tilling new soil[77] which produces a one-off release of GHG that it can take decades or centuries of production reductions in GHG emissions to equalize.[78] As an example, converting grass lands to corn production for ethanol takes about a century of annual savings to make up for the GHG released from the initial tilling.[77]

Change in land use

Large-scale farming is necessary to produce agricultural alcohol and this requires substantial amounts of cultivated land. University of Minnesota researchers report that if all corn grown in the U.S. were used to make ethanol it would displace 12% of current U.S. gasoline consumption.[79] There are claims that land for ethanol production is acquired through deforestation, while others have observed that areas currently supporting forests are usually not suitable for growing crops.[80][81] In any case, farming may involve a decline in soil fertility due to reduction of organic matter,[82] a decrease in water availability and quality, an increase in the use of pesticides and fertilizers, and potential dislocation of local communities.[83] New technology enables farmers and processors to increasingly produce the same output using less inputs.[79]

Cellulosic ethanol production is a new approach that may alleviate land use and related concerns. Cellulosic ethanol can be produced from any plant material, potentially doubling yields, in an effort to minimize conflict between food needs vs. fuel needs. Instead of utilizing only the starch by-products from grinding wheat and other crops, cellulosic ethanol production maximizes the use of all plant materials, including gluten. This approach would have a smaller carbon footprint because the amount of energy-intensive fertilisers and fungicides remain the same for higher output of usable material. The technology for producing cellulosic ethanol is currently in the commercialization stage.[84][23]

Using biomass for electricity instead of ethanol

Converting biomass to electricity for charging electric vehicles may be a more "climate-friendly" transportation option than using biomass to produce ethanol fuel, according to an analysis published in Science in May 2009[85] Researchers continue to search for more cost-effective developments in both cellulosic ethanol and advanced vehicle batteries.[86]

Health costs of ethanol emissions

For each billion ethanol-equivalent gallons of fuel produced and combusted in the US, the combined climate-change and health costs are $469 million for gasoline, $472–952 million for corn ethanol depending on biorefinery heat source (natural gas, corn stover, or coal) and technology, but only $123–208 million for cellulosic ethanol depending on feedstock (prairie biomass, Miscanthus, corn stover, or switchgrass).[87]

Efficiency of common crops

As ethanol yields improve or different feedstocks are introduced, ethanol production may become more economically feasible in the US. Currently, research on improving ethanol yields from each unit of corn is underway using biotechnology. Also, as long as oil prices remain high, the economical use of other feedstocks, such as cellulose, become viable. By-products such as straw or wood chips can be converted to ethanol. Fast growing species like switchgrass can be grown on land not suitable for other cash crops and yield high levels of ethanol per unit area.[65]

Crop Annual yield (liters/hectare, US gal/acre) Greenhouse-gas savings
vs. petrol[a]
Cold hardiness

zone limit

Hot

hardiness zone limit

Comments
Sugar cane 6800–8000 L/ha,[37][88][89][90]
727–870 gal/acre
87%–96% 9 13[91][92] Long-season annual grass. Used as feedstock for most bioethanol produced in Brazil. Newer processing plants burn residues not used for ethanol to generate electricity. Grows only in tropical and subtropical climates.
Miscanthus 7300 L/ha,
780 gal/acre
37%–73% 5 9[93] Low-input perennial grass. Ethanol production depends on development of cellulosic technology.
Switchgrass 3100–7600 L/ha,
330–810 gal/acre
37%–73% 5 9[94] Low-input perennial grass. Ethanol production depends on development of cellulosic technology. Breeding efforts underway to increase yields. Higher biomass production possible with mixed species of perennial grasses.
Poplar 3700–6000 L/ha,
400–640 gal/acre
51%–100% 3 9[95] Fast-growing tree. Ethanol production depends on development of cellulosic technology. Completion of genomic sequencing project will aid breeding efforts to increase yields.
Sweet sorghum 2500–7000 L/ha,
270–750 gal/acre
No data 9 12[96] Low-input annual grass. Ethanol production possible using existing technology. Grows in tropical and temperate climates, but highest ethanol yield estimates assume multiple crops per year (possible only in tropical climates). Does not store well.[97][98][99][100]
Corn 3100–4000 L/ha,[37][88][89][90]
330–424 gal/acre
10%–20% 4 8[101] High-input annual grass. Used as feedstock for most bioethanol produced in USA. Only kernels can be processed using available technology; development of commercial cellulosic technology would allow stover to be used and increase ethanol yield by 1,100 – 2,000 litres/ha.
Sugar beet 6678 L/ha,

714 gal/acre[102]

No data 2 10 Grown as ethanol crop in France.
Cassava 3835 L/ha,

410 gal/acre[102]

No data 10 13 Grown as ethanol crop in Nigeria.
Wheat 2591 L/ha,

277 gal/acre[102]

No data 3[103] 12[104] Grown as ethanol crop in France.
Source (except those indicated): Nature 444 (7 December 2006): 673–676.
[a] – Savings of GHG emissions assuming no land use change (using existing crop lands).

Reduced petroleum imports and costs

One rationale given for extensive ethanol production in the U.S. is its benefit to energy security, by shifting the need for some foreign-produced oil to domestically produced energy sources.[105][106] Production of ethanol requires significant energy, but current U.S. production derives most of that energy from coal, natural gas and other sources, rather than oil.[107] Because 66% of oil consumed in the U.S. is imported, compared to a net surplus of coal and just 16% of natural gas (figures from 2006),[108] the displacement of oil-based fuels to ethanol produces a net shift from foreign to domestic U.S. energy sources.

According to a 2008 analysis by Iowa State University, the growth in US ethanol production has caused retail gasoline prices to be US$0.29 to US$0.40 per gallon lower than would otherwise have been the case.[109]

Motorsport

Leon Duray qualified third for the 1927 Indianapolis 500 auto race with an ethanol-fueled car.[110] The IndyCar Series adopted a 10% ethanol blend for the 2006 season, and a 98% blend in 2007.

The American Le Mans Series sports car championship introduced E10 in the 2007 season to replace pure gasoline. In the 2008 season, E85 was allowed in the GT class and teams began switching to it.[111]

In 2011, the three national NASCAR stock car series mandated a switch from gasoline to E15, a blend of Sunoco GTX unleaded racing fuel and 15% ethanol.[112]

Australia's V8 Supercar championship uses Shell E85 for its racing fuel.

Stock Car Brasil Championship runs on neat ethanol, E100.

Ethanol fuel may also be utilized as a rocket fuel. As of 2010, small quantities of ethanol are used in lightweight rocket-racing aircraft.[113]

Replacement cooking fuel

Project Gaia is a U.S. non-governmental, non-profit organization involved in the creation of a commercially viable household market for alcohol-based fuels in Ethiopia and other countries in the developing world. The project considers alcohol fuels to be a solution to fuel shortages, environmental damage, and public health issues caused by traditional cooking in the developing world. Targeting poor and marginalized communities that face health issues from cooking over polluting fires, Gaia currently works in Ethiopia, Nigeria, Brazil, Haiti, and Madagascar, and is in the planning stage of projects in several other countries.[114]

Research

 
Ethanol plant in Turner County, South Dakota

Ethanol research focuses on alternative sources, novel catalysts and production processes. INEOS produced ethanol from vegetative material and wood waste.[115] The bacterium E.coli when genetically engineered with cow rumen genes and enzymes can produce ethanol from corn stover.[116] Other potential feedstocks are municipal waste, recycled products, rice hulls, sugarcane bagasse, wood chips, switchgrass and carbon dioxide.[117][118]

Bibliography

  • J. Goettemoeller; A. Goettemoeller (2007). Sustainable Ethanol: Biofuels, Biorefineries, Cellulosic Biomass, Flex-Fuel Vehicles, and Sustainable Farming for Energy Independence (Brief and comprehensive account of the history, evolution and future of ethanol). Prairie Oak Publishing, Maryville, Missouri. ISBN 978-0-9786293-0-4.
  • Onuki, Shinnosuke; Koziel, Jacek A.; van Leeuwen, Johannes; Jenks, William S.; Grewell, David; Cai, Lingshuang (June 2008). Ethanol production, purification, and analysis techniques: a review. 2008 ASABE Annual International Meeting. Providence, Rhode Island. Retrieved 16 February 2013.
  • The Worldwatch Institute (2007). Biofuels for Transport: Global Potential and Implications for Energy and Agriculture (Global view, includes country study cases of Brazil, China, India and Tanzania). London, UK: Earthscan Publications. ISBN 978-1-84407-422-8.

See also

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External links

ethanol, fuel, fuel, containing, ethyl, alcohol, same, type, alcohol, found, alcoholic, beverages, most, often, used, motor, fuel, mainly, biofuel, additive, gasoline, summary, main, ethanol, blends, used, around, world, 2013, corn, ethanol, production, united. Ethanol fuel is fuel containing ethyl alcohol the same type of alcohol as found in alcoholic beverages It is most often used as a motor fuel mainly as a biofuel additive for gasoline Summary of the main ethanol blends used around the world in 2013 Corn vs Ethanol production in the United States Total corn production bushels left Corn used for Ethanol fuel bushels left Percent of corn used for Ethanol right The Saab 9 3 SportCombi BioPower was the second E85 flexifuel model introduced by Saab in the Swedish market Several common ethanol fuel mixtures are in use around the world The use of pure hydrous or anhydrous ethanol in internal combustion engines ICEs is only possible if the engines are designed or modified for that purpose Anhydrous ethanol can be blended with gasoline petrol for use in gasoline engines but with high ethanol content only after engine modifications to meter increased fuel volume since pure ethanol contains only 2 3 the energy of an equivalent volume of pure gasoline High percentage ethanol mixtures are used in some racing engine applications as the very high octane rating of ethanol is compatible with very high compression ratios The first production car running entirely on ethanol was the Fiat 147 introduced in 1978 in Brazil by Fiat Ethanol is commonly made from biomass such as corn or sugarcane World ethanol production for transport fuel tripled between 2000 and 2007 from 17 109 liters 4 5 10 9 U S gal 3 7 10 9 imp gal to more than 52 109 liters 14 10 9 U S gal 11 10 9 imp gal From 2007 to 2008 the share of ethanol in global gasoline type fuel use increased from 3 7 to 5 4 1 In 2011 worldwide ethanol fuel production reached 8 46 109 liters 2 23 10 9 U S gal 1 86 10 9 imp gal with the United States of America and Brazil being the top producers accounting for 62 2 and 25 of global production respectively 2 US ethanol production reached 57 54 109 liters 15 20 10 9 U S gal 12 66 10 9 imp gal in May 2017 3 Ethanol fuel has a gasoline gallon equivalency GGE value of 1 5 i e to replace the energy of 1 volume of gasoline 1 5 times the volume of ethanol is needed 4 5 Ethanol blended fuel is widely used in Brazil the United States and Europe see also Ethanol fuel by country 2 Most cars on the road today in the U S can run on blends of up to 15 ethanol 6 and ethanol represented 10 of the U S gasoline fuel supply derived from domestic sources in 2011 2 Some flexible fuel vehicles are able to use up to 100 ethanol Since 1976 the Brazilian government has made it mandatory to blend ethanol with gasoline and since 2007 the legal blend is around 25 ethanol and 75 gasoline E25 7 By December 2011 Brazil had a fleet of 14 8 million flex fuel automobiles and light trucks 8 9 and 1 5 million flex fuel motorcycles 10 11 12 that regularly use neat ethanol fuel known as E100 Bioethanol is a form of renewable energy that can be produced from agricultural feedstocks It can be made from very common crops such as hemp sugarcane potato cassava and corn There has been considerable debate about how useful bioethanol is in replacing gasoline Concerns about its production and use relate to increased food prices due to the large amount of arable land required for crops 13 as well as the energy and pollution balance of the whole cycle of ethanol production especially from corn 14 15 Contents 1 Chemistry 2 Sources 3 Production 3 1 Fermentation 3 2 Distillation 3 3 Dehydration 3 4 Post production water issues 3 5 Consumer production systems 4 Engines 4 1 Fuel economy 4 2 Cold start during the winter 4 3 Fuel mixtures 4 4 Other engine configurations 5 Experience by country 6 Environment 6 1 Energy balance 6 2 Air pollution 6 3 Carbon dioxide 6 4 Change in land use 6 4 1 Using biomass for electricity instead of ethanol 6 4 2 Health costs of ethanol emissions 7 Efficiency of common crops 8 Reduced petroleum imports and costs 9 Motorsport 10 Replacement cooking fuel 11 Research 12 Bibliography 13 See also 14 References 15 External linksChemistry Edit Structure of ethanol molecule All bonds are single bonds During ethanol fermentation glucose and other sugars in the corn or sugarcane or other crops are converted into ethanol and carbon dioxide C6H12O6 2 C2H5OH 2 CO2 heatEthanol fermentation is not 100 selective with side products such as acetic acid and glycols They are mostly removed during ethanol purification Fermentation takes place in an aqueous solution The resulting solution has an ethanol content of around 15 Ethanol is subsequently isolated and purified by a combination of adsorption and distillation During combustion ethanol reacts with oxygen to produce carbon dioxide water and heat C2H5OH 3 O2 2 CO2 3 H2O heatStarch and cellulose molecules are strings of glucose molecules It is also possible to generate ethanol out of cellulosic materials That however requires a pretreatment that splits the cellulose into glucose molecules and other sugars that subsequently can be fermented The resulting product is called cellulosic ethanol indicating its source Ethanol is also produced industrially from ethylene by hydration of the double bond in the presence of a catalyst and high temperature C2H4 H2O C2H5OHMost ethanol is produced by fermentation Sources EditMain article Energy crop Sugar cane harvest Cornfield in South Africa Switchgrass About 5 of the ethanol produced in the world in 2003 was actually a petroleum product 16 It is made by the catalytic hydration of ethylene with sulfuric acid as the catalyst It can also be obtained via ethylene or acetylene from calcium carbide coal oil gas and other sources Two million short tons 1 786 000 long tons 1 814 000 t of petroleum derived ethanol are produced annually The principal suppliers are plants in the United States Europe and South Africa 17 Petroleum derived ethanol synthetic ethanol is chemically identical to bio ethanol and can be differentiated only by radiocarbon dating 18 Bio ethanol is usually obtained from the conversion of carbon based feedstock Agricultural feedstocks are considered renewable because they get energy from the sun using photosynthesis provided that all minerals required for growth such as nitrogen and phosphorus are returned to the land Ethanol can be produced from a variety of feedstocks such as sugar cane bagasse miscanthus sugar beet sorghum grain switchgrass barley hemp kenaf potatoes sweet potatoes cassava sunflower fruit molasses corn stover grain wheat straw cotton other biomass as well as many types of cellulose waste and harvesting whichever has the best well to wheel assessment In 2008 an alternative process to produce bio ethanol from algae was announced by the company Algenol Rather than grow algae and then harvest and ferment it the algae grow in sunlight and produce ethanol directly which is removed without killing the algae It is claimed the process can produce 6 000 U S gallons per acre 5 000 imperial gallons per acre 56 000 liters per hectare per year compared with 400 US gallons per acre 330 imp gal acre 3 700 L ha for corn production 19 In 2015 the project was abandoned 20 Currently when the first generation processes for the production of ethanol from corn use only a small part of the corn plant the corn kernels are taken from the corn plant and only the starch which represents about 50 of the dry kernel mass is transformed into ethanol Two types of second generation processes are under development The first type uses enzymes and yeast fermentation to convert the plant cellulose into ethanol while the second type uses pyrolysis to convert the whole plant to either a liquid bio oil or a syngas Second generation processes can also be used with plants such as grasses wood or agricultural waste material such as straw Production EditAlthough there are various ways ethanol fuel can be produced the most common way is via fermentation The basic steps for large scale production of ethanol are microbial yeast fermentation of sugars distillation dehydration requirements vary see Ethanol fuel mixtures below and denaturing optional Prior to fermentation some crops require saccharification or hydrolysis of carbohydrates such as cellulose and starch into sugars Saccharification of cellulose is called cellulolysis see cellulosic ethanol Enzymes are used to convert starch into sugar 21 Fermentation Edit Main article Ethanol fermentation Ethanol is produced by microbial fermentation of the sugar Microbial fermentation currently only works directly with sugars Two major components of plants starch and cellulose are both made of sugars and can in principle be converted to sugars for fermentation Currently only the sugar e g sugar cane and starch e g corn portions can be economically converted There is interest in cellulosic ethanol obtained from breaking down plant cellulose to sugars and converting the sugars to ethanol 22 However cellulosic ethanol is currently uneconomical and not practiced commercially According to a 2006 International Energy Agency report cellulosic ethanol could be important in the future 23 Distillation Edit Ethanol plant in West Burlington Iowa Ethanol plant in Sertaozinho Brazil For the ethanol to be usable as a fuel the yeast solids and the majority of the water must be removed After fermentation the mash is heated so that the ethanol evaporates 24 This process known as distillation separates the ethanol but its purity is limited to 95 96 due to the formation of a low boiling water ethanol azeotrope with maximum 95 6 m m 96 5 v v ethanol and 4 4 m m 3 5 v v water This mixture is called hydrous ethanol and can be used as a fuel alone but unlike anhydrous ethanol hydrous ethanol is not miscible in all ratios with gasoline so the water fraction is typically removed in further treatment to burn in combination with gasoline in gasoline engines 25 Dehydration Edit There are three dehydration processes to remove the water from an azeotropic ethanol water mixture The first process used in many early fuel ethanol plants is called azeotropic distillation and consists of adding benzene or cyclohexane to the mixture When these components are added to the mixture it forms a heterogeneous azeotropic mixture in vapor liquid liquid equilibrium which when distilled produces anhydrous ethanol in the column bottom and a vapor mixture of water ethanol and cyclohexane benzene When condensed this becomes a two phase liquid mixture The heavier phase poor in the entrainer benzene or cyclohexane is stripped of the entrainer and recycled to the feed while the lighter phase with condensate from the stripping is recycled to the second column Another early method called extractive distillation consists of adding a ternary component that increases ethanol s relative volatility When the ternary mixture is distilled it produces anhydrous ethanol on the top stream of the column With increasing attention being paid to saving energy many methods have been proposed that avoid distillation altogether for dehydration Of these methods a third method has emerged and has been adopted by the majority of modern ethanol plants This new process uses molecular sieves to remove water from fuel ethanol In this process ethanol vapor under pressure passes through a bed of molecular sieve beads The bead s pores are sized to allow adsorption of water while excluding ethanol After a period of time the bed is regenerated under vacuum or in the flow of inert atmosphere e g N2 to remove the adsorbed water Two beds are often used so that one is available to adsorb water while the other is being regenerated This dehydration technology can account for energy saving of 3 000 btus gallon 840 kJ L compared to earlier azeotropic distillation 26 Recent research has demonstrated that complete dehydration prior to blending with gasoline is not always necessary Instead the azeotropic mixture can be blended directly with gasoline so that liquid liquid phase equilibrium can assist in the elimination of water A two stage counter current setup of mixer settler tanks can achieve complete recovery of ethanol into the fuel phase with minimal energy consumption 27 Post production water issues Edit Ethanol is hygroscopic meaning it absorbs water vapor directly from the atmosphere Because absorbed water dilutes the fuel value of the ethanol and may cause phase separation of ethanol gasoline blends which causes engine stall containers of ethanol fuels must be kept tightly sealed This high miscibility with water means that ethanol cannot be efficiently shipped through modern pipelines like liquid hydrocarbons over long distances 28 The fraction of water that an ethanol gasoline fuel can contain without phase separation increases with the percentage of ethanol 29 For example E30 can have up to about 2 water If there is more than about 71 ethanol the remainder can be any proportion of water or gasoline and phase separation does not occur The fuel mileage declines with increased water content The increased solubility of water with higher ethanol content permits E30 and hydrated ethanol to be put in the same tank since any combination of them always results in a single phase Somewhat less water is tolerated at lower temperatures For E10 it is about 0 5 v v at 21 C and decreases to about 0 23 v v at 34 C 30 Consumer production systems Edit While biodiesel production systems have been marketed to home and business users for many years commercialized ethanol production systems designed for end consumer use have lagged in the marketplace In 2008 two different companies announced home scale ethanol production systems The AFS125 Advanced Fuel System 31 from Allard Research and Development is capable of producing both ethanol and biodiesel in one machine while the E 100 MicroFueler 32 from E Fuel Corporation is dedicated to ethanol only Engines Edit The first ethanol powered car a Chrysler Dodge 1800 at Brazilian Aerospace Memorial pt Fuel economy Edit Ethanol contains approximately 34 less energy per unit volume than gasoline and therefore in theory burning pure ethanol in a vehicle reduces range per unit measure by 34 given the same fuel economy compared to burning pure gasoline However since ethanol has a higher octane rating the engine can be made more efficient by raising its compression ratio 33 34 For E10 10 ethanol and 90 gasoline the increase in fuel consumption in unmodified vehicles is small up to 2 8 when compared to conventional gasoline 35 and even smaller 1 2 when compared to oxygenated and reformulated blends 36 For E85 85 ethanol the effect becomes significant E85 produces lower mileage than gasoline and requires more frequent refueling Actual performance may vary depending on the vehicle Based on EPA tests for all 2006 E85 models the average fuel economy for E85 vehicles was 25 56 lower than unleaded gasoline 37 The EPA rated mileage of current United States flex fuel vehicles 38 should be considered when making price comparisons but E85 is a high performance fuel with an octane rating of about 94 96 and should be compared to premium 39 Ethanol is not suitable for most aircraft according to the RACQ as well as some motorbikes and small engines 40 though the Embraer EMB 202 Ipanema is an example of an aircraft that has been specifically designed for use with ethanol fuel in some variants Cold start during the winter Edit The Brazilian 2008 Honda Civic flex fuel has outside direct access to the secondary reservoir gasoline tank in the front right side the corresponding fuel filler door is shown by the arrow High ethanol blends present a problem to achieve enough vapor pressure for the fuel to evaporate and spark the ignition during cold weather since ethanol tends to increase fuel enthalpy of vaporization 41 When vapor pressure is below 45 kPa starting a cold engine becomes difficult 42 To avoid this problem at temperatures below 11 C 52 F and to reduce ethanol higher emissions during cold weather both the US and the European markets adopted E85 as the maximum blend to be used in their flexible fuel vehicles and they are optimized to run at such a blend At places with harsh cold weather the ethanol blend in the US has a seasonal reduction to E70 for these very cold regions though it is still sold as E85 43 44 At places where temperatures fall below 12 C 10 F during the winter it is recommended to install an engine heater system both for gasoline and E85 vehicles Sweden has a similar seasonal reduction but the ethanol content in the blend is reduced to E75 during the winter months 44 45 Brazilian flex fuel vehicles can operate with ethanol mixtures up to E100 which is hydrous ethanol with up to 4 water which causes vapor pressure to drop faster as compared to E85 vehicles As a result Brazilian flex vehicles are built with a small secondary gasoline reservoir located near the engine During a cold start pure gasoline is injected to avoid starting problems at low temperatures This provision is particularly necessary for users of Brazil s southern and central regions where temperatures normally drop below 15 C 59 F during the winter An improved flex engine generation was launched in 2009 that eliminates the need for the secondary gas storage tank 46 47 In March 2009 Volkswagen do Brasil launched the Polo E Flex the first Brazilian flex fuel model without an auxiliary tank for cold start 48 49 Fuel mixtures Edit Further information Common ethanol fuel mixtures Hydrated ethanol gasoline type C price table for use in Brazil EPA s E15 label required to be displayed in all E15 fuel dispensers in the U S In many countries cars are mandated to run on mixtures of ethanol All Brazilian light duty vehicles are built to operate for an ethanol blend of up to 25 E25 and since 1993 a federal law requires mixtures between 22 and 25 ethanol with 25 required as of mid July 2011 50 In the United States all light duty vehicles are built to operate normally with an ethanol blend of 10 E10 At the end of 2010 over 90 percent of all gasoline sold in the U S was blended with ethanol 51 In January 2011 the U S Environmental Protection Agency EPA issued a waiver to authorize up to 15 of ethanol blended with gasoline E15 to be sold only for cars and light pickup trucks with a model year of 2001 or newer 52 53 Beginning with the model year 1999 an increasing number of vehicles in the world are manufactured with engines that can run on any fuel from 0 ethanol up to 100 ethanol without modification Many cars and light trucks a class containing minivans SUVs and pickup trucks are designed to be flexible fuel vehicles using ethanol blends up to 85 E85 in North America and Europe and up to 100 E100 in Brazil In older model years their engine systems contained alcohol sensors in the fuel and or oxygen sensors in the exhaust that provide input to the engine control computer to adjust the fuel injection to achieve stochiometric no residual fuel or free oxygen in the exhaust air to fuel ratio for any fuel mix In newer models the alcohol sensors have been removed with the computer using only oxygen and airflow sensor feedback to estimate alcohol content The engine control computer can also adjust advance the ignition timing to achieve a higher output without pre ignition when it predicts that higher alcohol percentages are present in the fuel being burned This method is backed up by advanced knock sensors used in most high performance gasoline engines regardless of whether they are designed to use ethanol or not that detect pre ignition and detonation In June 2021 India brought forward to 2025 its target to implement a 20 ethanol blended auto fuel India s ethanol blending rate in fuel at the time of this target revision is 8 which is set to increase to 10 by 2022 based on the Roadmap for ethanol blending in India 2020 25 released on 5 June World Environment Day by Prime Minister Narendra Modi The government expects oil marketing companies such as Indian Oil Corp IOC and Hindustan Petroleum Corp Ltd HPCL to provide 20 ethanol blended fuel from April 2023 onward States like Maharashtra and Uttar Pradesh where ethanol is in surplus are expected to be the first to adopt the higher ethanol fuel blending rate 54 55 India is also prioritizing roll out of vehicles compatible with ethanol blended fuel From March 2021 auto manufacturers are required to indicate the ethanol compatibility of new vehicles and engines must be optimally designed to use 20 ethanol blended fuel The government expects automakers to begin production of ethanol blended fuel compliant vehicles before April 2022 54 However environmentalists worry that India s increased target for ethanol blending could incentivise water intensive crops such as sugarcane and rice and suggest that the government should focus on lower water intensity crops such as millets since India is already facing an acute water shortage 55 Other engine configurations Edit ED95 enginesSince 1989 there have also been ethanol engines based on the diesel principle operating in Sweden 56 They are used primarily in city buses but also in distribution trucks and waste collectors The engines made by Scania have a modified compression ratio and the fuel known as ED95 used is a mix of 93 6 ethanol and 3 6 ignition improver and 2 8 denaturants 57 The ignition improver makes it possible for the fuel to ignite in the diesel combustion cycle It is then also possible to use the energy efficiency of the diesel principle with ethanol These engines have been used in the United Kingdom by Reading Buses but the use of bioethanol fuel is now being phased out Dual fuel direct injectionA 2004 MIT study and an earlier paper published by the Society of Automotive Engineers identified a method to exploit the characteristics of fuel ethanol substantially more efficiently than mixing it with gasoline The method presents the possibility of leveraging the use of alcohol to achieve definite improvement over the cost effectiveness of hybrid electric The improvement consists of using dual fuel direct injection of pure alcohol or the azeotrope or E85 and gasoline in any ratio up to 100 of either in a turbocharged high compression ratio small displacement engine having performance similar to an engine having twice the displacement Each fuel is carried separately with a much smaller tank for alcohol The high compression for higher efficiency engine runs on ordinary gasoline under low power cruise conditions Alcohol is directly injected into the cylinders and the gasoline injection simultaneously reduced only when necessary to suppress knock such as when significantly accelerating Direct cylinder injection raises the already high octane rating of ethanol up to an effective 130 The calculated over all reduction of gasoline use and CO2 emission is 30 The consumer cost payback time shows a 4 1 improvement over turbo diesel and a 5 1 improvement over hybrid The problems of water absorption into pre mixed gasoline causing phase separation supply issues of multiple mix ratios and cold weather starting are also avoided 58 59 Increased thermal efficiencyIn a 2008 study complex engine controls and increased exhaust gas recirculation allowed a compression ratio of 19 5 with fuels ranging from neat ethanol to E50 Thermal efficiency up to approximately that for a diesel was achieved 60 This would result in the fuel economy of a neat ethanol vehicle to be about the same as one burning gasoline Fuel cells powered by an ethanol reformerIn June 2016 Nissan announced plans to develop fuel cell vehicles powered by ethanol rather than hydrogen the fuel of choice by the other car manufacturers that have developed and commercialized fuel cell vehicles such as the Hyundai Tucson FCEV Toyota Mirai and Honda FCX Clarity The main advantage of this technical approach is that it would be cheaper and easier to deploy the fueling infrastructure than setting up the one required to deliver hydrogen at high pressures as each hydrogen fueling station cost US 1 million to US 2 million to build 61 Nissan plans to create a technology that uses liquid ethanol fuel as a source to generate hydrogen within the vehicle itself The technology uses heat to reform ethanol into hydrogen to feed what is known as a solid oxide fuel cell SOFC The fuel cell generates electricity to supply power to the electric motor driving the wheels through a battery that handles peak power demands and stores regenerated energy The vehicle would include a tank for a blend of water and ethanol which is fed into an onboard reformer that splits it into pure hydrogen and carbon dioxide According to Nissan the liquid fuel could be an ethanol water blend at a 55 45 ratio Nissan expects to commercialize its technology by 2020 61 Experience by country EditMain article Ethanol fuel by country The world s top ethanol fuel producers in 2011 were the United States with 13 9 109 U S gallons 5 3 1010 liters 1 16 1010 imperial gallons and Brazil with 5 6 109 U S gallons 2 1 1010 liters 4 7 109 imperial gallons accounting together for 87 1 of world production of 22 36 109 U S gallons 8 46 1010 liters 1 862 1010 imperial gallons 2 Strong incentives coupled with other industry development initiatives are giving rise to fledgling ethanol industries in countries such as Germany Spain France Sweden China Thailand Canada Colombia India Australia and some Central American countries Annual fuel ethanol production by country 2007 2011 2 62 63 64 Top 10 countries regional blocks millions of U S liquid gallons per year World rank Country region 2011 2010 2009 2008 20071 United States 13 900 00 13 231 00 10 938 00 9 235 00 6 485 002 Brazil 5 573 24 6 921 54 6 577 89 6 472 20 5 019 203 EU 1 199 31 1 176 88 1 039 52 733 60 570 304 China 554 76 541 55 541 55 501 90 486 005 Thailand 435 20 89 80 79 206 Canada 462 30 356 63 290 59 237 70 211 307 India 91 67 66 00 52 808 Colombia 83 21 79 30 74 909 Australia 87 20 66 04 56 80 26 40 26 4010 Other 247 27World Total 22 356 09 22 946 87 19 534 99 17 335 20 13 101 70Environment EditEnergy balance Edit Energy balance 65 Country Type Energy balanceUnited States Corn ethanol 1 3Germany Biodiesel 2 5Brazil Sugarcane ethanol 8United States Cellulosic ethanol 2 36 experimental not in commercial production depending on production method Main article Ethanol fuel energy balance All biomass goes through at least some of these steps it needs to be grown collected dried fermented distilled and burned All of these steps require resources and an infrastructure The total amount of energy input into the process compared to the energy released by burning the resulting ethanol fuel is known as the energy balance or energy returned on energy invested Figures compiled in a 2007 report by National Geographic 65 point to modest results for corn ethanol produced in the US one unit of fossil fuel energy is required to create 1 3 energy units from the resulting ethanol The energy balance for sugarcane ethanol produced in Brazil is more favorable with one unit of fossil fuel energy required to create 8 from the ethanol Energy balance estimates are not easily produced thus numerous such reports have been generated that are contradictory For instance a separate survey reports that production of ethanol from sugarcane which requires a tropical climate to grow productively returns from 8 to 9 units of energy for each unit expended as compared to corn which only returns about 1 34 units of fuel energy for each unit of energy expended 66 A 2006 University of California Berkeley study after analyzing six separate studies concluded that producing ethanol from corn uses much less petroleum than producing gasoline 67 Carbon dioxide a greenhouse gas is emitted during fermentation and combustion This is canceled out by the greater uptake of carbon dioxide by the plants as they grow to produce the biomass 68 When produced by certain methods ethanol releases less greenhouse gases than gasoline does 69 70 Air pollution Edit Compared with conventional unleaded gasoline ethanol is a particulate free burning fuel source that combusts with oxygen to form carbon dioxide carbon monoxide water and aldehydes The Clean Air Act requires the addition of oxygenates to reduce carbon monoxide emissions in the United States The additive MTBE is currently being phased out due to ground water contamination hence ethanol becomes an attractive alternative additive Current production methods include air pollution from the manufacturer of macronutrient fertilizers such as ammonia A study by atmospheric scientists at Stanford University found that E85 fuel would increase the risk of air pollution deaths relative to gasoline by 9 in Los Angeles US a very large urban car based metropolis that is a worst case scenario 71 Ozone levels are significantly increased thereby increasing photochemical smog and aggravating medical problems such as asthma 72 73 Brazil burns significant amounts of ethanol biofuel Gas chromatograph studies were performed of ambient air in Sao Paulo Brazil and compared to Osaka Japan which does not burn ethanol fuel Atmospheric Formaldehyde was 160 higher in Brazil and Acetaldehyde was 260 higher 74 needs update Carbon dioxide Edit UK government calculation of carbon intensity of corn bioethanol grown in the US and burnt in the UK 75 Graph of UK figures for the carbon intensity of bioethanol and fossil fuels This graph assumes that all bioethanols are burnt in their country of origin and that previously existing cropland is used to grow the feedstock 75 See also Low carbon fuel standard The calculation of exactly how much carbon dioxide is produced in the manufacture of bioethanol is a complex and inexact process and is highly dependent on the method by which the ethanol is produced and the assumptions made in the calculation A calculation should include The cost of growing the feedstock The cost of transporting the feedstock to the factory The cost of processing the feedstock into bioethanolSuch a calculation may or may not consider the following effects The cost of the change in land use of the area where the fuel feedstock is grown The cost of transportation of the bioethanol from the factory to its point of use The efficiency of the bioethanol compared with standard gasoline The amount of carbon dioxide produced at the tail pipe The benefits due to the production of useful bi products such as cattle feed or electricity The graph on the right shows figures calculated by the UK government for the purposes of the Renewable transport fuel obligation 75 The January 2006 Science article from UC Berkeley s ERG estimated reduction from corn ethanol in GHG to be 13 after reviewing a large number of studies In a correction to that article released shortly after publication they reduce the estimated value to 7 4 A National Geographic overview article 2007 65 puts the figures at 22 less CO2 emissions in production and use for corn ethanol compared to gasoline and a 56 reduction for cane ethanol Carmaker Ford reports a 70 reduction in CO2 emissions with bioethanol compared to petrol for one of their flexible fuel vehicles 76 An additional complication is that production requires tilling new soil 77 which produces a one off release of GHG that it can take decades or centuries of production reductions in GHG emissions to equalize 78 As an example converting grass lands to corn production for ethanol takes about a century of annual savings to make up for the GHG released from the initial tilling 77 Change in land use Edit See also Indirect land use change impacts of biofuels and Issues relating to biofuels Fuel vs food Large scale farming is necessary to produce agricultural alcohol and this requires substantial amounts of cultivated land University of Minnesota researchers report that if all corn grown in the U S were used to make ethanol it would displace 12 of current U S gasoline consumption 79 There are claims that land for ethanol production is acquired through deforestation while others have observed that areas currently supporting forests are usually not suitable for growing crops 80 81 In any case farming may involve a decline in soil fertility due to reduction of organic matter 82 a decrease in water availability and quality an increase in the use of pesticides and fertilizers and potential dislocation of local communities 83 New technology enables farmers and processors to increasingly produce the same output using less inputs 79 Cellulosic ethanol production is a new approach that may alleviate land use and related concerns Cellulosic ethanol can be produced from any plant material potentially doubling yields in an effort to minimize conflict between food needs vs fuel needs Instead of utilizing only the starch by products from grinding wheat and other crops cellulosic ethanol production maximizes the use of all plant materials including gluten This approach would have a smaller carbon footprint because the amount of energy intensive fertilisers and fungicides remain the same for higher output of usable material The technology for producing cellulosic ethanol is currently in the commercialization stage 84 23 Using biomass for electricity instead of ethanol Edit Converting biomass to electricity for charging electric vehicles may be a more climate friendly transportation option than using biomass to produce ethanol fuel according to an analysis published in Science in May 2009 85 Researchers continue to search for more cost effective developments in both cellulosic ethanol and advanced vehicle batteries 86 Health costs of ethanol emissions Edit For each billion ethanol equivalent gallons of fuel produced and combusted in the US the combined climate change and health costs are 469 million for gasoline 472 952 million for corn ethanol depending on biorefinery heat source natural gas corn stover or coal and technology but only 123 208 million for cellulosic ethanol depending on feedstock prairie biomass Miscanthus corn stover or switchgrass 87 Efficiency of common crops EditAs ethanol yields improve or different feedstocks are introduced ethanol production may become more economically feasible in the US Currently research on improving ethanol yields from each unit of corn is underway using biotechnology Also as long as oil prices remain high the economical use of other feedstocks such as cellulose become viable By products such as straw or wood chips can be converted to ethanol Fast growing species like switchgrass can be grown on land not suitable for other cash crops and yield high levels of ethanol per unit area 65 Crop Annual yield liters hectare US gal acre Greenhouse gas savingsvs petrol a Cold hardiness zone limit Hot hardiness zone limit CommentsSugar cane 6800 8000 L ha 37 88 89 90 727 870 gal acre 87 96 9 13 91 92 Long season annual grass Used as feedstock for most bioethanol produced in Brazil Newer processing plants burn residues not used for ethanol to generate electricity Grows only in tropical and subtropical climates Miscanthus 7300 L ha 780 gal acre 37 73 5 9 93 Low input perennial grass Ethanol production depends on development of cellulosic technology Switchgrass 3100 7600 L ha 330 810 gal acre 37 73 5 9 94 Low input perennial grass Ethanol production depends on development of cellulosic technology Breeding efforts underway to increase yields Higher biomass production possible with mixed species of perennial grasses Poplar 3700 6000 L ha 400 640 gal acre 51 100 3 9 95 Fast growing tree Ethanol production depends on development of cellulosic technology Completion of genomic sequencing project will aid breeding efforts to increase yields Sweet sorghum 2500 7000 L ha 270 750 gal acre No data 9 12 96 Low input annual grass Ethanol production possible using existing technology Grows in tropical and temperate climates but highest ethanol yield estimates assume multiple crops per year possible only in tropical climates Does not store well 97 98 99 100 Corn 3100 4000 L ha 37 88 89 90 330 424 gal acre 10 20 4 8 101 High input annual grass Used as feedstock for most bioethanol produced in USA Only kernels can be processed using available technology development of commercial cellulosic technology would allow stover to be used and increase ethanol yield by 1 100 2 000 litres ha Sugar beet 6678 L ha 714 gal acre 102 No data 2 10 Grown as ethanol crop in France Cassava 3835 L ha 410 gal acre 102 No data 10 13 Grown as ethanol crop in Nigeria Wheat 2591 L ha 277 gal acre 102 No data 3 103 12 104 Grown as ethanol crop in France Source except those indicated Nature 444 7 December 2006 673 676 a Savings of GHG emissions assuming no land use change using existing crop lands Reduced petroleum imports and costs EditOne rationale given for extensive ethanol production in the U S is its benefit to energy security by shifting the need for some foreign produced oil to domestically produced energy sources 105 106 Production of ethanol requires significant energy but current U S production derives most of that energy from coal natural gas and other sources rather than oil 107 Because 66 of oil consumed in the U S is imported compared to a net surplus of coal and just 16 of natural gas figures from 2006 108 the displacement of oil based fuels to ethanol produces a net shift from foreign to domestic U S energy sources According to a 2008 analysis by Iowa State University the growth in US ethanol production has caused retail gasoline prices to be US 0 29 to US 0 40 per gallon lower than would otherwise have been the case 109 Motorsport EditLeon Duray qualified third for the 1927 Indianapolis 500 auto race with an ethanol fueled car 110 The IndyCar Series adopted a 10 ethanol blend for the 2006 season and a 98 blend in 2007 The American Le Mans Series sports car championship introduced E10 in the 2007 season to replace pure gasoline In the 2008 season E85 was allowed in the GT class and teams began switching to it 111 In 2011 the three national NASCAR stock car series mandated a switch from gasoline to E15 a blend of Sunoco GTX unleaded racing fuel and 15 ethanol 112 Australia s V8 Supercar championship uses Shell E85 for its racing fuel Stock Car Brasil Championship runs on neat ethanol E100 Ethanol fuel may also be utilized as a rocket fuel As of 2010 update small quantities of ethanol are used in lightweight rocket racing aircraft 113 Replacement cooking fuel EditProject Gaia is a U S non governmental non profit organization involved in the creation of a commercially viable household market for alcohol based fuels in Ethiopia and other countries in the developing world The project considers alcohol fuels to be a solution to fuel shortages environmental damage and public health issues caused by traditional cooking in the developing world Targeting poor and marginalized communities that face health issues from cooking over polluting fires Gaia currently works in Ethiopia Nigeria Brazil Haiti and Madagascar and is in the planning stage of projects in several other countries 114 Research Edit Ethanol plant in Turner County South Dakota Ethanol research focuses on alternative sources novel catalysts and production processes INEOS produced ethanol from vegetative material and wood waste 115 The bacterium E coli when genetically engineered with cow rumen genes and enzymes can produce ethanol from corn stover 116 Other potential feedstocks are municipal waste recycled products rice hulls sugarcane bagasse wood chips switchgrass and carbon dioxide 117 118 Bibliography EditJ Goettemoeller A Goettemoeller 2007 Sustainable Ethanol Biofuels Biorefineries Cellulosic Biomass Flex Fuel Vehicles and Sustainable Farming for Energy Independence Brief and comprehensive account of the history evolution and future of ethanol Prairie Oak Publishing Maryville Missouri ISBN 978 0 9786293 0 4 Onuki Shinnosuke Koziel Jacek A van Leeuwen Johannes Jenks William S Grewell David Cai Lingshuang June 2008 Ethanol production purification and analysis techniques a review 2008 ASABE Annual International Meeting Providence Rhode Island Retrieved 16 February 2013 The Worldwatch Institute 2007 Biofuels for Transport Global Potential and Implications for Energy and Agriculture Global view includes country study cases of Brazil China India and Tanzania London UK Earthscan Publications ISBN 978 1 84407 422 8 See also Edit Energy portal Renewable energy portal Ecology portalAlcohol fuel Biobutanol a gasoline replacement Bioconversion of biomass to mixed alcohol fuels Biodiesel Biomass Cellulosic ethanol Common ethanol fuel mixtures Corn ethanol DMF potential ethanol competitor biofuel Dimethyl ether Energy crop Ethanol effect Ethanol from coal Flexible fuel vehicle Food vs fuel Gasoline gallon equivalent Hydrogen fuel Issues relating to biofuels Liquid fuels Low carbon fuel standard Methanol fuel P series fuels Renewable energy Timeline of alcohol fuel United States energy lawReferences 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