theengineer.co.uk
Jul 23, 2008
Chemical giant Ineos has developed a technique to produce bioethanol in large quantities from municipal solid waste, organic commercial waste and agricultural residues. The company believes that, using the process, one tonne of dry waste can be converted into about 400 litres (100 gallons) of ethanol, which can either be blended with traditional fuels or replace them altogether. The technology - already proven at pilot plant scale - uses a three-stage process. First, the organic carbon material is gasified using oxygen to produce synthesis gas. The hot synthesis gas is then quenched and cleaned. Next, the cooled synthesis gas is passed into a fermentation process, where it is consumed by anaerobic bacteria and turned into ethanol. Finally, the ethanol solution is purified to make anhydrous ethanol. The ethanol is subsequently...
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