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Biofuel waste into commodity
VATIS UPDATE Part
Article body

Researchers at Washington State University (WSU) and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), the United States, have discovered a method of converting a biofuel waste product into a usable and valuable commodity in a two-step process. The first, developed by PNNL, applies high pressure and high temperature to algae to create bio oil. The second converts that bio oil into biofuel, which can replace gasoline, diesel and jet fuel.

It’s that first step, called hydrothermal liquefaction that produces waste – approximately 25% to 40% of carbon and 80% of nutrients from the algae are left behind in wastewater streams. “The wastewater is generally hard to process because it contains a variety of different chemicals in small concentrations,” said Birgitte K. Ahring, at WSU. The results of the team’s research are published in Bioresource Technology.

Ahring and her team have found that adapting anaerobic microbes – microbes that live without oxygen – to break down the remaining residue is a viable option. Through this process, the material becomes degradable and gets transformed into a bionatural gas without the use of harsh chemicals. The solid material that remains can also be applied as a fertilizer or recycled back into the hydrothermal liquefaction process for further use.