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Ethanol to Hydrogen Reactor Developed

guacamolefoo writes "CNN reports that researchers at the University of Minnesota have developed a small (2 ft. high) hydrogen reactor that turns ethanol into hydrogen and then uses a fuel cell to turn the hydrogen into electricity. It notably does not use fossil fuels in the process. I knew that liquor would save us all some day."

19 of 839 comments (clear)

  1. Average Slashdot user by dethl · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The Minnesota researchers envision people buying ethanol to power the small fuel cell in their basements. The cell could produce 1 kilowatt of power, nearly enough for an average home.

    But not anywhere close enough for your average Slashdot user.

    --
    "Some fight for law. Some fight for justice. What will you fight for? One day, you will see."
    1. Re:Average Slashdot user by pla · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, I wonder how they came up with that figure, the average hairdryer uses over 1000 watts

      Do you run a hairdryer all day long?

      A 1Kw fuel cell, running 24/7 and charging a battery array, would almost take care of a typical home's electricity needs. I agree only 1Kw seems a tad low, but 2Kw would more than suffice for most homes.

      For comparison, in CA, on-grid "normal" homes (ie, all the standard electric-sucking toys) with a supplimentary 3Kw solar array (which only really helps for less than eight hours per day) can basically break even on their electic bills.

  2. Re:Making ethanol uses fossil fuels by pla · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ethanol takes energy to make. Lots of energy, possibly more than it contains. That energy comes from fossil fuels.

    No.

    Our current industrial-ag model of crop production consumes quite a lot of fossil fuels. That does not mean the same thing as "growing corn and converting it to ethanol requires fossil fuels".

    Producing ethanol requires nothing more than the sun, some corn, and bacteria. Yes, you'll notice that list includes an energy source, but not "oil".


    Using Ethanol as a fuel is mostly a way to funnel money to Corn Belt farmers.

    To that extent, I will agree with you, because we do use an industrial-ag model of crop production. We don't need to, though.

  3. Re:Corn ain't free! by vaguelyamused · · Score: 5, Insightful
    It also takes lots of fossil fuels to remove more fossil fuels from underground. We don't have to ship corn from Alaska, Venezuela and Saudi Arabia. Moving and placing oil rigs and driling equipmen, laying pipelines and fueling supertankers has got to be more fuel intesive than plowing, planting and fertilizing a field.

    How many gallons of oil does it take to put a gallon of gasoline in your tank. And remember one gallon of oil does not equal one gallon of gasoline.

    Also, if you are going to be paying money to fuel your car would you rather pay it to American farmers and corporations or foreign oil barons and corporations.

    --
    STOP ROCK VIDEO
  4. Re:Making ethanol uses fossil fuels by mattdm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Please tell me how you will plow your farm, plant your corn, harvest it, process it and transport it to the ethanol plant, what you'll make your fertilizer from and how you'll get your ethanol to your hydrogen plant all without using any fossil fuels...

    Using the hydrogen of course. Duh.

  5. Re:Corn ain't free! by stoolpigeon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A lot of people are saying this- but it seems to imply that farming equipment, etc. must always run on fossil fuels.

    It sounds a lot to me like saying - "yeah that new C language seems o.k. but you still need language X to write a compiler for it- so what's the point" But once you move beyond that- you can drop language X or in this case fossil fuels. What if your farm equipment starts running on fuel cells? The move from fossil fuels has to take place in steps.

    --
    It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
  6. Re:Making ethanol uses fossil fuels by Dirtside · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Actually, all fuels take more energy to produce than they contain -- thanks to the same Second Law of Thermodynamics that Uncle Cecil seems to misunderstand at the end of the linked article. (Don't get me wrong, I like Cecil, but I think he made a little mistake.) Anything that produced more energy than was put into it would violate the Second Law.

    You might respond to this by saying, "But it takes less energy to get oil out of the ground than that oil eventually produces when burned!" Well, not exactly. The energy that went into making that oil was expended millions of years ago, and it all started as solar energy that was converted into plant and animal matter by the appropriate biological processes. Not really any different than the ethanol produced by plants that are grown with solar energy.

    It's just that those hundreds of millions of years produced a large reserve of oil, so that the energy expended in finding it, drilling it, refining it, and transporting it is less than the amount of energy we get out of it -- but the total amount of energy that's gone into getting the oil into a usable form *is* still greater than the amount that's produced when it burns.

    The amount of oil available on our planet is finite. There's still plenty of debate about how much is left, but there's never been any indication that more oil is being produced inside the planet, at least not at a rate that's anywhere near what we use it at. Which means we are going to eventually need alternative fuels. (Assuming our rate of consumption doesn't decrease drastically.) That might be 10, 20, 50, 500 years in the future, but it *will* happen.

    All that said, there's also no reason why we have to use fossil fuels to produce ethanol. It's just that fossil fuels are currently the cheapest energy source. That won't remain true forever: the cost of all renewable sources will only ever decrease, as technology improves.

    --
    "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
  7. Details by DumbSwede · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Ethanol Chemical Formula C2H6O

    So after liberating some (all) of the hydrogen we are left with C2 and O I would assume it would pick up O2 from the air and make C02 as a by product, with potentially some water also.

    Last time I checked C02 was a greenhouse gas. It doesn't add to CO2 levels if (big if) the sources for ethanol production extract the CO2 from the atmosphere at the same rate. Keep in mind it isn't just the raw materials, but energy needed to process and create the ethanol, which may cause pollution in the process.

    I would have expected CNN to give the actual chemical by-products, and not just summarize as "no greenhouse gasses" which is extremely misleading. I would also be interested to know how many of the H6 get truly extracted, and what remainder go into water (which would say something about efficiency and power density). Or whether some more exotic compounds are left behind that just C02 and H20 (even if only in trace amounts). A molecule here, a molecule there, and sometimes things aren't as benign as one might first assume.

    Good news in any event, just wish there where more details.

  8. Re:Making ethanol uses fossil fuels by plover · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Ethanol takes energy to make. Lots of energy, possibly more than it contains

    This is true only with respect to burning ethanol as a fuel in an internal combustion engine. This statement does not appear take into account the difference between an internal combustion engine and the conversion of ethanol to hydrogen to electricty to motive power.

    You also are ignoring the fact that the ethanol can be produced using ethanol based energy. The tractor power, the distillation, the factory incidentals, the distribution, all of that energy could be provided by ethanol. That it isn't produced that way yet is due in large part to the lack of a widely available efficient ethanol conversion process.

    The "hydrogen-based energy economy" has been hampered by the fact that hydrogen is not as easy to deliver as gasoline. However, ethanol is exactly as easy to deliver as gasoline, and the infrastruture already exists to do so. The problems with converting methanol or ethanol to hydrogen for fuel cells (the expense of the platinum catalysts) has been one of the final roadblocks to widespread adoption of fuel cell powered vehicles.

    Crying "corn belt subsidy" before the technology even sees the light of day is counter-productive. Yes, some people are going to get filthy rich off of whatever fuel supplants oil. Unethical people will make financially-motivated decisions to use a "dirty" process and release lots of pollution. There will be more crooked deals with more crooked politicians, there will be kickbacks and porkbarrels the likes of which will relegate Haliburton and Cheney to the junior varsity level. Some oil industry barons will be ruined, many oil industry workers will lose their jobs, and the world will be changed. But it needs to change. The new direction may or may not be ethanol, but it can't remain fossil fuel based forever. And we need to explore those alternatives now.

    --
    John
  9. Re:Making ethanol uses fossil fuels by slinkp · · Score: 5, Insightful
    You misunderstand. The technology under discussion does not involve burning ethanol at all. They are extracting hydrogen from "wet" ethanol which is a lot easier to produce than the purified ethanol required for burning.

    I don't claim to know whether this is a net gain when all energy costs and byproducts (chiefly carbon dioxide) are taken into account, but don't dismiss the idea out of hand by spuriously equating it to the burning of purified ethanol.

    Here's an article with a bit more information.. I found this link elsewhere in this discussion.

  10. Inefficiency by jaadu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That can't work (at least not as a closed system)...you can't run the corn production and ethanol distillation process on the ethanol produced and expect to have an energy surplus (or even break even) unless the operation is so large, and so efficient, that the energy input from sunlight is larger than the loss through various inefficiencies. This converter was a breakthrough, and it still only reaches 60% conversion efficiency, so it doesn't sound like things are going to be that efficient anytime soon.

  11. please... by *weasel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As if no-one had ever used a C compiler to compile their original New-Language compiler, and then threw the C away entirely.

    the shift here is from using fossil fuels that take many years of pressure and heat to create, and mostly lie across oceans - to a fuel source that only takes bacteria, the sun, and a few weeks to create, and can be produced in abundance locally.

    if /nothing/ else - the energy independence is a huge step forward.

    and the numbers for ethanol creation are referring to -engine-grade-ethanol- which must be (expensively) purified. the ethanol source for the reactor in question -doesn't-.

    not to mention that the IOP article says that this ethanol->hydrogen reactor is 3x as efficient as an ethanol engine directly.

    --
    // "Can't clowns and pirates just -try- to get along?"
  12. Re:Making ethanol uses fossil fuels by mediahacker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First of all, it's Yeast and not bacteria.
    (I'm a homebrewer going commercial)

    Yeast will at best get a corn mash up to about 20% ABV (Alcohol by Volume) To get this any higher, you need to distill it which requires lots and lots of heat (look up the specific heat of water and remember that 80% of your mother liquor is water).

    In addition to the alcohol, there are lots of other chemicals - I don't know but I would be pretty sure that some of them would need to be removed or they would corrupt the chemical reactions. I would not be surprised if this reactor didn't require a pretty pure ethanol.

    Finally, given the poor efficiency of fuel-cells, you might be better off just burning the ethanol in a micro-turbine. These will run on anything and have nice numbers.

  13. Re:Not now..... by Cybrr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Decomposing plants and animals are carbon neutral. They took in as much carbon as they release.
    Burning oil, however, is putting us back to prehistoric CO2 levels.

    Using power from our very own stellar fusion reactor located at a convenient approximate 18 light minutes, is much cleaner.

    --
    Why did GEAR crush RDP?
  14. Re:Not now..... by cotodoso · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, now the ethanol is ultimately dependent on fossil fuel machines. This development, though, makes it possible to change that, so that eventually, the diesel machines can be changed over to hydrogen-fuel-cell machines. Currently, one of the major obstacles to switching over to a hydrogen economy has been the high cost of getting hydrogen, with the cheapest source being natural gas. This has the potential to change that.

    cotodoso

  15. Re:$1 of profit of Ethanol maker costs Taxpayer $3 by pavon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The ratio of profits to subsidy is completely meaningless number. For example, if they were to turn around next year and give their employees a small raise which cut into their profits in half, it would mean that we pay $60 for every dollar of profit they make, but that doesn't mean they are wasting twice as much money.

    A more usefull number would be the ratio of revenue to subsidy. I couldn't find that in the report you linked, but assuming their profit margin is about 10%, then for every dollar I pay for ethanol another three dollars comes from the taxpayers.

  16. Ethanol doesn't have to come from corn... by cr0sh · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Actually, there is a much, much better crop that could be used for its production. This crop actually fixes nitrogen into the soil, so no fertilizers (made from oil) need to be used (if used in rotation with other food crops, so much the better), it is naturally disease and pest resistant (so no oil-based pesticides/herbicides needed), has a ton of other uses (not just for fuel, but for food, clothing, and other things too!) and can grow anywhere.

    What is this miracle crop, you might ask?

    This miracle crop scares our government, and numerous other larg-scale entities (such as various corporations), because of its multitude of uses, and the fact that it is so easy to grow. At one time, it was grown in plentiful amounts right here in the United States. Then a ban was induced in the early part of the twentieth century (but was lifted briefly for World War 2), and farmers couldn't grow it. Recently, products made from it came under our government's eye again - but the courts beat them back once more (of course, these products are made mostly in Canada, or from the crop grown in Canada). We, the people, are being denied access to growing this crop, and reaping its benefits, by our own government. A government started with a document entitled the "Declaration of Independence" - written on paper made from the very fibers of the crop denied to us today!

    So, what is this wonderous crop, you plea?

    Say it loud - say it proud - let the world and our corrupt politicians know it: HEMP! HEMP! HEMP!

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  17. Re:Making Ethanol can be cheap! Read how here! PLE by PourYourselfSomeTea · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Oh, and a few more things that turn into ethanol quite readily.

    1. Potatoes (really good. soil-healthy crop)
    2. Grapes
    3. Wheat
    4. Sugar Beets
    5. Honey
    6. Rye
    7. Apples
    8. Peaches
    9. Oats
    10. Several types of hardy grasses, including milkweed, dandelions, cattails.

    The list goes on. What's more, there's a surplus of all these every year. Regularly, crops simply get dumped into the ocean to mitigate price drops caused by low supply/demand ratio. We already farm too well. What if farmers could sell their entire surplus, every year? The revival of agriculture as a way of life. Even the >gasp small-farm -- remember what I said about local farming being a better way to produce energy because you don't have to ship it?!

  18. Do you people realize what this means? by cowtamer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    For a bunch of people who call themselves nerds, the /. crowd has certainly been short-sighted lately. Nerd!=whiner.

    A compact ethanol to hydrogen reformer means that at least two of the the LARGEST problems stopping the adoption of hydrogen have been solved

    1) Transportation:

    The existing gasoline transport/storage/dissemination architecture can be used for ethanol

    2) Net production of CO2

    Until now, the cheapest ways to produce hydrogen have relized on fossil fuel consumption. Now hydrogen can be derived from biomass.

    To everyone who complains about ethanol subsidies: corn is NOT the only way to make ethanol. You could probably find a way to ferment whatever is fastest growing--after all, this is not for human consumption.

    In summary, I hope this thing is for real...