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- 2011 Annual Meeting
- Catalysis and Reaction Engineering Division
- Future Directions In Reaction Engineering
- (158b) A Chemical Perspective On the Conversion of Biomass to Fuels
In this talk, I will briefly discuss our efforts to co-process hydrogen rich alkanes with biomass-derived oxygenates for the production of synthetic fuels. As raw materials for fuels, biomass and light alkanes lie at opposite ends of the chemical spectrum. Light alkanes are inert and their chemical conversion involves the removal of hydrogen and may involve oxygen addition while, biomass-feedstock contains oxygen, the removal of which limits biomass-to-fuels conversion and involves the addition of hydrogen. I will describe our results related to coupling biomass-deoxygenatation with alkane-dehydrogenation pathways over zeolite catalysts so that in essence, alkanes serve as a surrogate for molecular hydrogen for biomass deoxygenation while biomass serves as the oxygen carrier for hydrogen removal from alkanes.