Researchers at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst have made a potentially ground-breaking discovery in the production of biofuels from sustainable, non-food sources. By heating cellulosic plant material to between 750 and 1,100 degrees Fahrenheit in the presence of a catalyst, then quickly cooling it, the team of graduate students led by associate professor George W. Huber was able to produce a mixture of hydrocarbons identical to gasoline in less than two minutes.
biogasoline
Green Gasoline? Scientists Produce $1/Gallon Gasoline From Non-Food Plant Material : Gas 2.0
(via gas2.org)
Submitted by claybodie on Wed, 2008-04-09 19:25. | Tags: architecture | alternative fuels | biofuel | biogasoline | cellulosic | ethanol | gas | gasoline | renewable fuels | technology | transportation | UMass
Shell, Virent to Develop Second-Generation BioGasoline
(via gas2.org)
After one year of collaborative research, Shell and Virent Energy Systems announced they will be trying to produce a biogasoline directly from plant sugars—as opposed to producing ethanol—with the intention of offering a fuel that can be used at high ratios in standard gasoline engines.
Submitted by claybodie on Mon, 2008-03-31 20:17. | Tags: technology | alternative fuels | Biodiesel | biofuel | biogasoline | ethanol | gas | Shell | technology | Virent Energy Systems