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Where can I buy butanol: Two sources:
Sharon Haydu Sales Associate Ashland Chemicals 1842 Enterprise
Pkwy Twinsburg, OH 44087 Phone: 330.405.0461 x221 Fax: 330,405.0482 and
Todd Giallorati Superior Solvents and Chemicals Cell: (614) 804-6823 Fax: (614) 921-8225 tgiallorati@superioroil.com
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FAQ:
Waste
Stream
One final question:
What kind of waste disposal will be necessary for Butanol
production using your process; Bacterium laced or not?
Basically
the same waste stream one would have from any particular biomass process used
in ethanol production.
We
can not feed stock animals more than 20% of their diet and when mass producing “Our
Fuel of the Future – Butanol”, there will be more biomass (Distillers Grains,
spent Stovers, including Switch Grass, and probably lacing of Kudzu) waste generated
than we can feed all the animals.
This
spent matter should be placed under the ground from which it came. Any Bacterium in a Fermentation waste stream
will be beneficial to the earth from which they came.
This
waste handling process builds the “Tilth”, encouraging aerobic and anaerobic life
and creating a “Healthy Soil” for our children’s future. Deep “Top Soil” is as essential for life on
this sphere as it is for us to stop Global Warming.
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Diesel Blends:
From
John:
<<
Butyl alcohol can be mixed with diesel fuel in virtually any concentration. It
does not separate as water is added or as the temperature is decreased.
Further, butyl alcohol does not significantly change the cetane number of
diesel fuel. In blends with diesel fuel, butyl alcohol tends to reduce the
solidification temperature of the fuel at low temperatures.>>
This
information came from, http://www.ext.colostate.edu/pubs/farmmgt/05010.html
.
I wish they had a performance comparison with different diesel butanol
blends. I have not seen such a study.
There is a
company OTD whose main claim to fame is their ability to blend 7.7% ethanol
with diesel fuel. The Government seems to think their blend would be better for
their use. Butanol would appear to be far superior, especially since
Khosla, Branson, Woolsey, BP, DuPont etc are interested. OTD information
links,
http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=143822&p=irol-newsArticle_Print&ID=840359&highlight=
and
http://www.marketwire.com/mw/release_html_b1?release_id=174129
.
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As with any burgeoning technology we have to do pilot plant
studies and then get into production. We are looking at - at least 18-36
months. Our primary goal is large
facility engineering and construction.
A tremendous amount of information is available on the site:
www.butanol.com
There are downloads and hyperlinks throughout. Any underlined word will
generally take you somewhere with more information. The cursor will turn
to a finger when placed over these highlighted and underlined areas --
just click.
Someday we see retrofitting existing ethanol plants but
not tomorrow. I feel at that time we will also have turn key platforms to
apply to small applications and farmsteads.
Spread the word...
Butanol is a simple solution to our future
without oil and Global Warming.
Just change what we make from growing matter.
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Status of your project?
Just like my progress in the past 15 years
slowly but surely in small methodical steps.
We still need to
conserve and strive for cheaper sources of energy, solar and wind.
I
certainly hope your pilot size plant is coming along, how can I get updates on
your developments.
Visit our web site - I will give regular updates
We have several corn to
corn syrup plants operated in town. I was wondering if some of the waste from
these agrobusinesses might be a suitable raw material for your process. If so, what part and how might I find out what
they do with waste currently?
14 pounds of sugar per gallon is require for
either butanol or ethanol. It does not
matter where that sugar comes from. Any sugar or starch or biomass waste stream from an agribusiness will do. What is left over is either DDG’s, animal food or waste devoid of sugars that can be drilled back
into the earth to build tilth and thereby use less fertilizer next year.
Do you have a rough
timeline as to when your business would be able to license or sell turn key
solutions to turn different feed stocks (whey, corn, distillers grain and solubles,
etc) into butanol?
As with any burgeoning technology we have
to do pilot plant studies and then get into production. We are looking at - at least 18-36
months. Someday we see retrofitting
ethanol plants but not tomorrow. I feel
at that time we will also have turn key platforms to apply to small
applications and farmsteads.
Are any government
agencies, industry groups or individuals
testing butanol in
a reformer to produce hydrogen for fuel
cells?
To my knowledge they are still looking at only methanol and ethanol. I am just now
posting a page on the net "A butanol economy" that discusses this safe
fuel cell fuel aspect. Maybe someone out
there will realize how safe butanol is and how easy it is to reform for its
hydrogen.
Are any government
agencies testing butanol as a motor fuel.
None. You can not currently find butanol, biobutanol or alternative fuel butanol on the NREL or DOE
data base. There has been no long term research!
Have any industry
groups or individuals tested butanol as a motor fuel.
None -- Maybe VW since I turned one of
their prime engineers onto it last year when I went through Phoenix, but no one is stepping forward...
Now that BP and DuPont have voiced their entrance
into the biobutanol market there will be a lot more research going on.
Will using butanol as a
motor fuel void the warranty on new cars in this country?
Probably ! All the testing they have done on all the
other alternative fuels still has to be done for butanol. Years from now they might cover butanol under
the warranty.
Since I came off the Trip Cross Country last year my Buick still runs on about 25-50% butanol
all the time. I get better performance and gas
mileage. It would have coughed by now...
Are there any long term
issues for engine parts or process equipment exposed to high concentrations of
butanol, like corrosion or hydrogen embrittlement or something?
I can not answer that. Only long term
testing by researchers will resolve that question.
How would 100% butanol perform in cold (say -30C) weather engine start
tests?
Add
a little gasoline ! Other solutions for this cold starting will
come. This is a minor problem as we go down the butanol
path. We solved quite a few, more difficult problems over the
past 30 years, for ethanol applications. Butanols' will be far
easier !
Your web site suggests
that butanol will run in diesel engines, are there studies or examples of this?
Butanol can be blended with
diesel I do not think you can use it straight. No one has really
looked at this case since World War II.
I think everyone will be
surprised once funding helps look at "Butyl-Diesel™".
Is butanol compatible with old cars, or will
it corrode or otherwise damage the fuel system?
There has been no
long term studies and I doubt if any warranties will cover a new car using
butanol.
What I have done
is proven factually that butanol works in my car and anecdotally it works in
yours, just as it does in dozens of folks around here that have used it in their
cars with improved gas mileage and performance even at 10-20% concentration.
For two years I have been burning butanol.
If my car would
have been damaged by butanol it would have gone boom by now.
We (the public)
have had to harden our cars for ethanol usage even at 10%. So the corrosion
question is mute. Butanol is a much kinder fuel than ethanol and less
corrosive.
Use at your own
risk until someone five years from now says, "Well I guess that Butyl-Dude was
right."
What are your Trade Marks?
Since 1996 Environmental Energy Inc. has used the following
Trade-Marks.
ButylFuel™ - any blend of 100% pure to 1% of butanol.
Butylizer™ - A biorefinery which produces butanol - a turnkey unit.
BioButanol™ - butanol made from biomass
Home-Brew- Small
Scale
Every branch of science has at some point been confronted by
a daunting question that stumps progress for years, even decades. The low yield of butanol from the
conventional fermentation process is very uneconomical and has kept butanol as
an alternative off the radar. The low yield and difficulty of recovery are
the other reasons.
If the production of Butanol “only” were simple we would
have had it on the alternative fuels table a long time ago. Butanol is
associated with the production of acetone, iso-propanol and ethanol, acetic,
propionic and butyric acids, each requires sugar and our process eliminates all
the ancillary products.
As a farm boy I am always working to make a “home-brew” –
class room – farm application possible. Butanol
belongs to the public – God/Nature does all the work. My current effort is developing a patent that
might be applicable. Our goal is to eventually enable the farmer with 50-1,000
acres to make our fuel.
Anaerobic fermentation is different than yeast ethanol or
soy biodiesel created in a bucket at home.
Sterility, contamination and oxygen sensitivity are the difficult
problems. A gas chromatograph is an
essential part of the process so you can see what is going on – it is an
expensive piece of equipment and most home owners can’t afford it. I hope to create one specifically designed
for our process but still it would be ~$3,000 much better than the $30,000 some
of them cost today. All these problems are being addressed in time. The bacteria are available from American Type
Culture Collection www.atcc.org
Just getting the bacteria is one thing – bringing them up
and feeding them and working with them involves skills that a person needs to
be developed. As we begin to manufacture
more on a large scale I see our company being able to hold classes to teach
others those skills.
The other things is “Patience” because of microbial lag
phase and the ever present problem of the process going
south by not being sterile, oxygen free or contaminated and having to start
over. There are some very critical steps
involved – especially sterilization.
Bacteria, fungus, and many other critters are in the air and can
contaminate the process on start up. But
once the process is up and running it is continuous and runs for a year or
more, unlike ethanol’s or biodiesel’s batch processes, which are advertised in
kits for “home-brew” in many magazines.
I wish it were simpler but if it were it would be common practice today
and we would not be looking at highly modified cars and all the problems
associated with the other alternatives.
Sugar
Whatever is being done for ethanol’s sources of sugars (Feed
Stock – Material Handling) is the same for butanol.
The more variety of biomass sources as food for the microbes
the better all our futures will be.
It takes 14 pounds of sugar - no matter the source to make
either a gallon of ethanol, which does not replaces gas in your car today, or a
gallon of butanol which does.
One pound starch =’s approximately one pound of sugar.
Sugars can be obtained from corn, switch grass; sugar beats
or cane, algae, trees, Kudzu and most anything that grows on the planet.
It is just the costs of processing the biomass into digestible
sugars that varies so much from biomass source to biomass source.
There is a lot of research into corn, algae, cellulose, lignin,
switch grass, trees, paper, stovers and many other feedstocks, look for it, at
possibly a local college library, NREL, DOE and other data bases.
http://butanol.com/docs/2002_NREL_Lignin.pdf
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