Fraunhofer is producing alcohol and acetone
at its fermentation facilities, using the synthesized gas from the steel
plants. Fuels and specialty chemicals can be procured from these.
Credit: © Fraunhofer IME
Carbon monoxide-rich exhaust gases from steel
plants are only being reclaimed to a minor extent as power or heat.
Fraunhofer researchers have developed a new recycling process for this
materially unused carbon resource: They successfully produced fuel and
specialty chemicals from these exhaust gases on a laboratory scale.
The exhaust gas masses that arise from steel manufacturing plants are
gigantic: the chimneys of the Duisburg Stahlwerke alone unleash several
million tons of carbon dioxide. Fraunhofer has developed a process by
which these exhaust fumes can be reclaimed and recycled into fuels and
specialty chemicals. With the aid of genetically modified bacterial
strains, the research team ferments the gas into alcohols and acetone,
convert both substances catalytically into a kind of intermediary diesel
product, and from this they produce kerosene and special chemicals.
Participants include the Fraunhofer Institute for Molecular Biology and
Applied Ecology IME in Aachen, as well as the Institute for Environment,
Safety, and Energy Technology UMSICHT in Oberhausen and the Institute
for Chemical Technology ICT in Pfinztal. The technology came about
during one of Fraunhofer's internal preliminary research projects and
through individual projects with industrial partners. The patented
process currently operates on the laboratory scale.
Business model instead of problem
"From our viewpoint, the quantities of carbon alone -- which rise as
smoke from the Duisburg steelworks as carbon dioxide -- would suffice to
cover the entire need for kerosene of a major airline. Of course, we
still have got a bit to go to reach this vision. But we have
demonstrated on the laboratory scale that this concept works and could
be of interest commercially. In addition to the exhaust gases, syngas --
similar gas mixtures from home and industrial waste incineration -- can
also be used for the engineered process," explains Stefan Jennewein of
IME, who is coordinating the project.
The biochemists at IME use syngas -- a mixture of carbon monoxide,
carbon dioxide and hydrogen -- as a carbon resource for fermentation.
Using bacterial strains of the Clostridium species, the syngas
transforms either into short-chain alcohols like butanol and hexanol, or
into acetone. To do so, IME engineered new genetic processes for the
efficient integration of large gene clusters in the Clostridium genome.
At the same time, Fraunhofer further expanded its syngas fermentation
system and used it for experiments with the steel and chemicals
industry.
The chemists around Axel Kraft at UMSICHT evaporate the residual
fermentation products and in a continuous catalytic process, couple the
fermentation molecules into an intermediate product consisting of
long-chain alcohols and ketones. This interim product already meets the
standards for ship diesel, and, like fats and oils, can be converted
through hydrogenation into diesel fuel for cars or kerosene for planes.
Kristian Kowollik from the environmental engineering department at ICT
obtains specialty chemicals from the interim product connected with
this, which already can now directly replace petroleum-based products.
For example, amines can be used in the pharmaceutical industry or the
production of tensides and dying agents. "The products synthetically
produced by us can be used both as fuels as well as speciality
chemicals. Exactly like this has worked until now with petroleum as the
raw material source," states Jennewein.
In the next stage, the scientists strive to demonstrate that their
technology also works with large quantities. "Over the next
one-and-a-half years, we aim at gaining a better understanding of the
processes, and to optimize them. Our goal is to apply for certification
processes for the fuels. That is how its viability for practical use
will be officially validated. For vehicle diesel, that takes about one
year, and for kerosene about three years," Axel Kraft adds.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by
Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft.
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
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