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Green Fuel : Ethanol from Cellulosic Biomass

Cellulosic EthanolOne of the barriers to the production of ethanol from cellulosic biomass is the toughness of the cellulosic structure, and its resistance to chemical and enzymatic hydrolysis and insolubility in most solvents. Accordingly, pre-treatment such as steam explosion to break down the structure is a necessary first step.


Now, researchers at the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology have discovered that cellulose undergoes a transformation from a crystalline form to an amorphous gel-like one very similar to a starch gel in water at high temperature (320° C) and pressure 25 (MPa).

Starch forms a gel when heated in water to around 70° C. Gelatinization is a key step in the conversion of starch to glucose, which is then fermented to create ethanol.

Up to now, it had been thought that cellulose could not gelatinize, because its crystalline structure is more stable than that of starch.

Next steps in developing the process would be to attempt it with production-grade biomass waste, and to devise a mechanism for the transformation under milder conditions.

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AN EXTREEM DEFORESTATION

A recent assessment by the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) projects that orangutans will be virtually eliminated in the wild within two decades if current trends continue. Orangutans are native to the tropical forests of Indonesia and Malaysia, where rapid forest loss and degradation are threatening orangutans and other species, including the Sumatran tiger, the Sumatran rhinoceros and the Asian elephant.

[at the picture : Green area is tropical rain forest]