CROATIAN CENTER of RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES
(CCRES)
ALGAE AND BIOFUEL
Algae: An Important Source for Making Biofuels
Biofuels are the alternative fuels like ethanol, butanol,
biodiesel, methane and others obtained from the biomass. Biomasses are the
wasted materials obtained from the plants, animals and human beings. With the
increasing prices of the crude oil and importance of achieving self-reliance in
energy and growing concern for the environment alternative fuels are receiving
more government and public attention.
The government of US has set the targets for using of
36 billion gallons of biofuels by the year 2022 as a result most of the
gasoline sold here is mixed with ethanol. Similarly, biodiesel mixed with
petroleum diesel is found to create lesser pollution without affecting the
performance of the engines. Methane gas is also increasingly used for the production
of electricity and also driving the vehicles. Ethanol, biodiesel, and methane
are all biofuels obtained from biomass like wasted crops, crops containing
sugar, vegetable oil etc.
Due to increasing demands of the biofuels, many farmers are
now tempted to raise the crops that would yield biofuels instead of the food
crops. This leads to misuse of limited resources available in the form energy,
fertilizers and pesticides. In some parts of the world large areas of forests
have been cut down to grow sugarcane for ethanol and soybeans and palm-oil
tress for making biodiesel. US government is making efforts to make sure the
farming for biomass materials does not competes with the farming of food crops
and that the farming of biomass would require lesser fertilizers and
pesticides.
Algae used as Biomass
One of the most important promising sources of biofuels is
algae. Algae are single celled (most of them) microorganisms that grow in salt
water, fresh water and even in contaminated water. Algae can grow in sea, rivers, ponds, and
also on land not suitable for production. Like other plants, algae also absorb
energy from the sun in the presence of atmospheric carbon dioxide by the
process called photosynthesis. Just like other wasted plants and crops, algae also
carry energy and it can be used as an important biomass material. There are
more than 65,000 known species of algae having different colors like green,
red, brown and blue-green that offer wide range of options for obtaining the
biofuels from them.
Algae keep growing extensively in the nature and it
generates lots of waste that could even create problems of disposal. Since
algae carries energy, it can be used as an important source of alternative or
renewable energy since algae is available in abundant quantities that can last
forever. Algae can be used as the biomass materials to obtain various biofuels.
Various colonies of algae can be considered to be small biological factories
containing lots of energy.
Biofuels from Obtained from Algae
Like the wastes from the plants, the algae can also be used
as the biomass to produce various types of biofuels. One of the most popular
types of biofuels, biodiesel, is obtained from the vegetable oil. The same
biodiesel can also be obtained from algae oil. The biodiesel from algae can be
mixed with the petroleum diesel and used for the running of the vehicles. It
can also be used as the fuel for jets, airplanes, refineries, and pipelines.
The biodiesel obtained from algae can be readily used with automobile and jet
engines without the need to make any modifications in the engine. It meets all
the specifications of the petroleum diesel fuel.
The algae biomass can also be used for making ethanol and
butanol biofuels, which are type of alcohols. Butanol is considered to have
more efficiency than ethanol and it is obtained from dried algae that act as a
biomass. The carbohydrates extracted from algae are converted into natural
sugars, which are then converted into butyric, lactic and acetic acids by the
process of fermentation. Further fermentation of butyric acid is carried out to
produce butanol.
The biomass obtained from algae can also be used to produce
biogas that contains methane and carbon dioxide. Methane is an important
component of natural gas, so this biogas can be used just like the natural gas
for producing heating effect and also to produce electricity.
Advantages of using Algae as Biomass
One of the important advantages of algae it that it can be
grown in almost any type of water: salt, fresh, and even contaminated water. It
can be grown in vast sea and river water, small rain water ponds and even
commercial or domestic manmade ponds. It can also be grown on non-arable
unproductive lands increasing the utility of waste lands.
Another important advantage of growing algae for producing
biofuels is that it does not displace the farmland used for growing the food
crops. The farmers using various resources for producing biodiesel instead of
the food crops has been one of the major concerns for the government, algae
helps solving this tricky problem.
Algae have the potential to yield 30 times more energy than
the crops grown on land, which are currently being used to produce the
biofuels. This would further encourage the use of algae for producing biofuels
and land for producing food crops.
Another important advantage of algae is that it uses carbon
dioxide for its growth. Thus the pollution causing carbon dioxide produced from
the other sources can be utilized to grow algae, which helps keeping the
environment cleaner.
CCRES
special thanks to
Escapeartist, Inc
CROATIAN CENTER of RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES
(CCRES)
The EU proposed a default value of 107g CO2 equivalent per megajoule of fuel (CO2/mj) for oil from tar sands, as compared to 87.5g CO2/mj for crude oil. Following is a list of the equivalent values for biofuels:
OdgovoriIzbriši• Palm Oil - 105g
• Soybean – 103g
• Rapeseed – 95g
• Sunflower – 86g
• Palm Oil with methane capture – 83g
• Wheat (process fuel not specified) – 64g
• Wheat (as process fuel natural gas used in CHP) – 47g
• Corn (Maize) – 43g
• Sugar Cane – 36g
• Sugar Beet – 34g
• Wheat (straw as process fuel in CHP plants) – 35g
• 2G Ethanol (land-using) – 32g
• 2G Biodiesel (land-using) – 21g
• 2G Ethanol (non-land using) – 9g
• 2G Biodiesel (non-land using) – 9g