Researchers at Washington University in St. Louis have devised a technique for turning some of the harder parts of a plant into fuel, a breakthrough that could further bring down the cost of biofuels.
Two of the major components of plant material are cellulose and lignin. Lignin essentially turns fibers into wood. It hardens cell walls and binds cellulose fibers together. It's the reason we have coal. If ancient plants hadn't had lignin, microorganisms would have eaten them and thus, the plants would never have been transformed into rock. (There's your fun primordial fact for the day.)
Lignin is also the bane of many companies trying to make cellulosic ethanol. The first step in many cellulosic processes involves separating the cellulose from lignin and other materials with acid or heat. That takes quite a bit of energy.
Lars Angenent, assistant professor of energy, environmental, and chemical engineering at WU, has figured out a way to take a cellulose/lignin mix from pre-treated corn fiber and turn it into butyrate, a precursor of butanol, a less corrosive, high-energy liquid fuel. Conceivably, the process could result in a richer fuel than standard ethanol that exploits plant matter more efficiently. That's key for the corn industry; critics note that corn ethanol doesn't result in a huge net gain in energy over the amount of energy required to make it. Ethanol made from other materials does much better on that score.
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