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Renewable diesel processing, materials and corrosion challenges for unfamiliar feedstocks are the focus of a roundtable discussion to be hosted by the Materials Technology Institute (MTI) on June 21.
Scientists at the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) developed a system to convert methane into a deep green, energy-rich, gelatin-like substance that can be used as the basis for biofuels and other bioproducts, specialty chemicals and even animal feed.
Six projects will receive up to $18 million in funding from the U.S. Department of Energy to reduce the modeled price of algae-based biofuels to less than $5 per gasoline gallon equivalent (gge) by 2019.
Researchers have discovered the structure of the enzyme that makes cellulose — a finding that could lead to easier ways of breaking down plant materials to make biofuels and other products and materials.
A team of researchers has developed an efficient way to convert raw agricultural and forestry residues and other plant matter — known as lignocellulosic biomass — into biofuels and chemicals.