Science and Health

Making Better Biofuel May Be Easier Than Building Greener Engines

Biofuels could become more useful now that we're figuring out how to use them in our existing engines.

Making Better Biofuel May Be Easier Than Building Greener Engines
Jaqueline Pollini
SMS

Biofuels are a promising alternative to our limited supplies of petroleum, but fuel distilled from plants usually needs special engines to burn it. Now, scientists in Germany have figured out how to create a version that could run today's engines.

The fuel comes from the oils in rapeseed plants. On its own, it burns too hot to run in traditional diesel engines. So researchers used ethylene gas to break the oil's long carbon chains into shorter ones.

The result is close enough to regular diesel fuel that cars wouldn't need modified engines to use it. And if the ethylene comes from, say, corn, we could use plants for the whole process.

Biofuels In One Easy Step: Just Add Modified E. Coli
Biofuels In One Easy Step: Just Add Modified E. Coli

Biofuels In One Easy Step: Just Add Modified E. Coli

Researchers at Berkeley National Laboratory have made it easier than ever to turn plant matter into usable fuel.

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But making small batches of fuel in an experiment is still expensive, so don't expect cars running on plant diesel to pop up everywhere.

Instead, it could help the existing diesel economy be greener. The researchers think as their process gets cheaper, plant-based fuels could get blended into diesel more often.