Center for Advanced BioEnergy Research, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

New Method Swaps Pressurized Biomass For Petroleum in Plastics, Cosmetics

Popular Science
By Rebecca Boyle
Posted 09.03.2010 at 1:00 pm

An accidental chemistry discovery could lead to a new method for making antifreeze, moisturizer and plastic bottles out of biomass rather than petroleum, according to researchers at Iowa State University.

Professor Walter Trahanovsky was using a high-temperature chemistry process to see if he could obtain sugar derivatives from cellulose. It’s based on supercritical fluids, which are heated under pressure until their fluid and gas states merge. It is not quite as exotic as it sounds — supercritical carbon dioxide is used to decaffeinate coffee.

Trahanovsky and his colleagues put cellulosic materials in alcohols and subjected them to high temperatures and pressures. They got the sugars they were looking for, but they also found something else: significant amounts of propylene glycol and ethylene glycol. This was totally unexpected, Trahanovsky said.

Read more

No comments: