2013 Spring Meeting & 9th Global Congress on Process Safety

(126c) Alcohol to Jet Fuel



In the interest of energy independence and reduction of greenhouse gas emissions, alternative fuels derived from renewable rather than fossil sources is a major topic of R&D within private industry, universities, and government.  The Alcohol to Jet (AtJ) pathway is of major interest recently, especially as routes to higher-carbon bio-alcohols, such as bio-butanol, have become commercially viable.  In the standard AtJ pathway, dehydration of bio-alcohol (usually bio-butanol) yields the versatile butene platform molecule, which can be oligomerized to form pure olefins that boil in the jet range.  Upon further hydrogenation by well-established hydrotreating technology, the olefins are converted into stable paraffins with high yield of jet-boiling product.