Brilliant bacteria and clever chemistry
In laboratories elsewhere at DTU, a different group of researchers is also tackling the challenge of reducing the environmental impact of aviation. Here another Pablo—a PhD student who answers to the full name Pablo Doménech—is working with researchers in the fields of both biotechnology and chemistry with the aim of developing a two-phased approach for turning CO2 captured from the production of biogas into jet fuel.
“This way, when the fuel burns up in the air, it will not lead to an excess emission of CO2 because the CO2 has already been trapped and made into fuel. It’s closing the carbon cycle,” he explains.
The first phase is a fermentation process where carefully selected, temperature-resistant bacteria are fed CO2 and renewable hydrogen derived from, for example, wind power by electrolysis. The bacteria turn this into acetate.
But acetate is not the desired compound itself, and this is therefore fed to a different type of bacteria that can turn it into a variety of other derived compounds that all have oxygen in their structure, so-called oxygenates. These oxygenates are commonly used solvents or alcohols such as acetone and butanol.
The second phase involves chemical catalysis – which is a process that facilitates a chemical reaction – to combine the oxygenates with each other. This approach creates longer hydrocarbons with structures of the types that are used for aviation fuels because of their very specific fuel properties.
“But these molecules still contain oxygen, which is undesirable in fuels because it will decrease the energetic capacity. So as part of the chemical catalysis we remove the oxygen by adding more renewable hydrogen which basically attacks the oxygen in these molecules and takes it out in the form of water. That way we end up with alkanes which are long chains of hydrocarbons that are the ones that are suitable for use as jet fuel,” he says.
The work is showing great promise as the researchers have been able to produce all four types of hydrocarbons (linear and branched alkanes, cyclic hydrocarbons, and aromatic compounds) that are the main ingredients in the type of jet fuel currently in use in commercial aviation.
All alternatives are welcome
Over the next few years, work will continue to test the energetic potential of these compounds as actual jet fuels, bring down the use of energy in the production process, and assess if the process can be carried out on a larger scale at an acceptable cost.
In the meantime, Pablo Doménech is excited that researchers worldwide are committed to fighting climate change from a range of perspectives because we need all hands on deck to explore different pathways.
“It’s not one or the other, but all alternatives are welcome in order to reduce our dependence on fossil fuels,” he emphasizes.