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Biomass & Nature's "Extreme" Enzymes

June 15, 2007   |   7 Comments
Sandia researchers looking to biology in earth's extreme environments to help solve lignocellulosic ethanol puzzle

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"The ultimate dream -- and it's only a dream right now -- would be to take a poplar tree, put it into a tank, let it sit for three days, then come back and watch as the ethanol comes pouring out of the spigot. Though we're probably decades away from that, this project aims to consolidate the pretreatment steps and get us one step closer to realizing that vision."

-- Blake Simmons, Sandia National Laboratories, chemical engineer
7 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 7
June 15, 2007
<p>In all&nbsp; the buzz about the&nbsp; potential&nbsp; for&nbsp; biomass&nbsp; energy&nbsp; sources&nbsp; I&nbsp; have&nbsp; yet&nbsp; to encounter&nbsp; a&nbsp; serious&nbsp; discussion about&nbsp; total&nbsp; energy&nbsp; budgets .&nbsp;&nbsp; The&nbsp; inherit&nbsp; problem&nbsp; with&nbsp; cellulistic&nbsp; feed&nbsp; stocks&nbsp; is&nbsp; their&nbsp; low&nbsp; energy&nbsp; density.&nbsp; Even&nbsp; if&nbsp; you choose a relatively concentrated agricultural crop region---- the irrigated wheat straw producion of the upper&nbsp; Snake River&nbsp; plain under consideration by&nbsp; Iogen for example--- plant size is limited below optimum by the costs of transporting feed stocks to the plant. Biomass not returned to the soil&nbsp; results in long term soil&nbsp; degration and encourages increased used of natural gas derived fertilizers.</p><p>Algae biodiesel production stands the best chance of having a viable long term energy balance because of productivity factors per acre that are potentially hundreds of times that of straw or switchgrass.&nbsp;</p>
Comment
2 of 7
June 16, 2007
I agree that algae is a much&nbsp; better option for&nbsp; biomass energy production than trees.&nbsp; They are prolific; offer a way to&nbsp; treat effluent;remove carbon dioxide;create esters and sugars and proteins&nbsp; that can be used as both&nbsp; renewable fuels and feed stocks.However Lignon is Natures way that plants use to <strong>avoid</strong>&nbsp; decay.&nbsp; Trees in particular are filled with chemicals designed to&nbsp; defeat digestion. Animals that have diets high in cellulose&nbsp; need <strong>huge</strong> guts&nbsp; filled with&nbsp; acids and enzymes and bacteria .&nbsp; They&nbsp; spend the vast majority of their&nbsp; time and energies processing and reprocessing their feed stock. Lignon just takes too much energy to break down for the amount of energy you can extract from its' sugars. Our goverment is all to&nbsp; often&nbsp; bedazelled&nbsp; by images&nbsp; of huge plants&nbsp; filled with enormous processors consuming vast quantities of resources and producing copeous quanities of stuff. However government agents often don't ask the critical questions like, &quot;Will this technology create more good than harm? Or is it just someones pet project?&quot; Lignon digestion is an interesting problem, but not a practical pursuit for a county that needs real solutions in a hurry .
Comment
3 of 7
June 20, 2007
I submit that ethanol is not as&nbsp;&nbsp;desirable as other materials for powering internal combustion engines. It has a lower BTU content and creates a greater&nbsp;need for more&nbsp;of the chemical&nbsp;in the course of utilization than petroleum products.&nbsp; We need a different approach to this problem. Part of the ethanol problem is the taking of land for cellulosic materials in place of agricultural use, as well as habitat for environment.
Comment
4 of 7
June 20, 2007
i was wondering if there might not be a way to get the bacterium that live in the digestive tract of termites to do this work. they might do a good job as well.
Comment
5 of 7
June 20, 2007
The bulkiness of cellulosic stocks is a major stumbling block. Ask yourself why we don't collect some of this available biomass today and displace coal with it in powerplants (burn it)? Coal is our biggest CO2 source. We don't collect it and burn it because it is disperesed and low density. It simply costs too much and would require lots of energy to collect. Too much hope is being pinned on turning biomass into liquid fuels. Burning it in powerplants and electrification of&nbsp;our car fleet would be far more energy efficient than turning it into liquid fuels and throwing away 70% of what energy is left in an internal combustion engine.
Comment
6 of 7
June 20, 2007
<p>Algae is a nice, but it takes tons and tons of the stuff and a warm climate, energy intensive presses, to make bio-oil...and you have a lot of bio-mass left over. </p><p>&nbsp;Fortunately, the U.S. has empty sewerage treatment settling ponds, and a readily available growth medium. Heating them is a problem, however. </p><p>there are fungi which thrive on lignon and can possibly be genetically modified to transform wood and pre-process woody waste. Fungal decomposition occurs daily in your favorite forest....stop on your next hike and examine how it works.</p>
Comment
7 of 7
June 21, 2007
<p>&nbsp;</p><p>If Donald Pier was saying you need to use the largest gut then findo out exactly what the reaction would be from a whale or a dolphin.&nbsp; These two have large guts and they also are mammals with a oxygen bood system.&nbsp; Maybe there guts are enzyme efficient.</p><p>Also, the government throws money away on an experimental basis.&nbsp; Look at the huge bird Howard Hughes made and only flew once at government expense.&nbsp; It did advance the technology and if&nbsp;WWII had not of ended then his plan would have been put into production probably.</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
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