New findings by chemical engineering researchers could improve
renewable energy production
Regents Professor Lanny
Schmidt (chemical engineering and materials science) and his
university colleagues–graduate students James Salge, Brady
Dreyer and Paul Dauenhauer–invented a new process that could
significantly improve the efficiency of fuel production from renewable
energy sources.
The process yields a mixture of hydrogen and carbon monoxide gases
called synthesis gas, which is now used to make synthetic diesel
fuel (dimethyl ether, also a substitute for propane gas) and ammonia,
a constituent of fertilizer. Hydrogen is also the energy source
for fuel cells and may someday be burned in car engines instead
of fossil-based gasoline. The research is published in the Nov.
3 issue of Science. More…
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