PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Waste, an alternative source of energy to petroleum

The Department of Chemical Engineering of the UPV/EHU-University of the Basque Country has developed fundamental processes for producing raw materials and fuels using biomass and tires

Waste, an alternative source of energy to petroleum
2014-10-23
(Press-News.org) This news release is available in Spanish.

Martín Olazar, a UPV/EHU chemical engineer, has designed a fundamental process for producing alternatives to petroleum in sustainable refineries. As Olazar himself pointed out, one of the unavoidable conditions of the process is not to harm the environment. This researcher has developed a reactor based on conical spouted beds which, by means of flash or rapid pyrolysis, produces fuels and raw materials using various types of waste. Olazar has developed two lines, depending on the type of waste: one uses biomass; the other, plastics, tyres and similar waste. The first of the lines uses agricultural waste and biomass from forests. According to Olazar, 70% of the mass treated can be turned into bio-oil, "which means that if we process a tonne of biomass, we can obtain 700 litres of bio-oil," he asserted. The process to produce bio-oils is based on flash pyrolysis. "This is very rapid pyrolysis. We can produce it in 20 milliseconds at a low temperature (500 degrees)," he pointed out, "so high energy consumption is not required." During pyrolysis the biomass is degraded and the compounds produced can be rapidly extracted, because if not "they start to react among themselves and produce things we are not interested in. That is why pyrolysis is so fast," stressed the researcher. The compounds produced when the biomass is degraded are extracted, condensed and bio-oil is produced; it can be used as a substitute for petroleum. "It is a biological oil, so to speak," pointed out Olazar. According to the researcher, the quality of bio-oil is lower than that of petroleum because unlike the latter the bio-oil contains oxygen so it has to be treated. Olazar stressed that it can be used to produce any petroleum by-product: hydrogen, olefin derivatives, aromatics, etc. He also pointed out that the bio-oil process is much more efficient than the biodiesel process: "To produce biodiesel, a specific plant needs to be grown and a very small percentage of it is taken advantage of. Only 10% of the mass used is turned into biodiesel, whereas we use whole plant waste and obtain 70%." The reactor has already been patented and a pilot facility has been put into operation in collaboration with the IK4-IKERLAN research centre. The promoters of the project are planning to open a larger facility in the future. Carbon black from tyres In addition to the biomass project, Olazar has also designed another one to produce items like (or very similar to) the original ones using other waste (plastics, tyres, etc.). This project is particularly efficient in the treatment of tyres: "When flash pyrolysis is carried out under specific conditions, we can produce some very interesting raw materials, like carbon black." Carbon black is the main raw material used to manufacture tyres. In the sustainable refinery, the processing of used tyres turns 30% of the waste into carbon black. "A high enough percentage for it to be profitable," Olazar assured us. Apart from carbon black, this solid has a whole host of applications as an adsorbent, as well. The (liquid) remainder can be put to various uses. Olazar highlights the following as one of the advantages of the system: it can operate continuously. "It is a unique reactor in its class. We have patented it and we want to start up a medium-sized unit," he added.

INFORMATION:

Additional information Martín Olazar-Aurrecoechea (Gamiz-Fika, Biscay, 1956) is Professor of Chemical Engineering at the Faculty of Science and Technology. He started his thesis at the Complutense University of Madrid, under the supervision of Prof Arturo Romero-Salvador, but did most of the work (and the most important part) at the UPV/EHU, under the supervision of Prof Javier Bilbao-Elorriaga. His thesis is entitled 'Bentzil alkoholaren polimerizazioa katalizatzaile azidoen gainean. Zinetikaren ikerketa eta erreaktorearen diseinua' (Polymerization of benzyl alcohol over acid catalysts. Kinetic research and reactor design), a subject on which various papers have been published in specialised journals like Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research, published by the American Chemical Society.

References Hosseini, S.H., Karami, M., Olazar, M., Safabakhsh, R., Rahmati, M. 2014. 'Prediction of the minimum spouting velocity by genetic programming approach'. Industrial and Engineering Chemistry Research, 53, Issue 32: 12639-12643. Artetxe, M., Lopez, G., Amutio, M., Bilbao, J., Olazar, M. 2014. 'Kinetic modelling of the cracking of HDPE pyrolysis volatiles on a HZSM-5 zeolite based catalyst'. Chemical Engineering Science, 116: 635-644. Aguado, R. , Elordi, G., Arrizabalaga, A., Artetxe, M., Bilbao, J., Olazar, M. 2014. 'Principal component analysis for kinetic scheme proposal in the thermal pyrolysis of waste HDPE plastics'. Chemical Engineering Journal, 254: 357-364. Alvarez, J., Lopez, G., Amutio, M., Bilbao, J., Olazar, M. 2014. 'Upgrading the rice husk char obtained by flash pyrolysis for the production of amorphous silica and high quality activated carbon'. Bioresource Technology, 170: 132-137.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Waste, an alternative source of energy to petroleum

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Paperwork consumes one-sixth of US physicians' time and erodes morale: Study

2014-10-23
The average U.S. doctor spends 16.6 percent of his or her working hours on non-patient-related paperwork, time that might otherwise be spent caring for patients. And the more time doctors spend on such bureaucratic tasks, the unhappier they are about having chosen medicine as a career. These are some of the findings of a nationwide study by Drs. Steffie Woolhandler and David Himmelstein, internists in the South Bronx who serve as professors of public health at the City University of New York and lecturers in medicine at Harvard Medical School. The study was published ...

Beetroot beneficial for athletes and heart failure patients, research finds

2014-10-23
MANHATTAN, Kansas — Football teams are claiming it improves their athletic performance, and according to new research from Kansas State University, it also benefits heart failure patients. The special ingredient: beetroot. Recently, the Auburn University football team revealed its pregame ritual of taking beetroot concentrate, or beet juice, before each game. The juice may have contributed to the team's recent winning season — and one exercise physiologist who has been studying the supplement for several years says that may be the case. "Our research, published ...

New tool identifies high-priority dams for fish survival

2014-10-23
Scientists have identified 181 California dams that may need to increase water flows to protect native fish downstream. The screening tool developed by the Center for Watershed Sciences at the University of California, Davis, to select "high-priority" dams may be particularly useful during drought years amid competing demands for water. "It is unpopular in many circles to talk about providing more water for fish during this drought, but to the extent we care about not driving native fish to extinction, we need a strategy to keep our rivers flowing below dams," said lead ...

New window of opportunity to prevent cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases

New window of opportunity to prevent cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases
2014-10-23
Future prevention and treatment strategies for vascular diseases may lie in the evaluation of early brain imaging tests long before heart attacks or strokes occur, according to a systematic review conducted by a team of cardiologists, neuroscientists, and psychiatrists from Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and published in the October issue of JACC Cardiovascular Imaging. For the review, Mount Sinai researchers examined all relevant brain imaging studies conducted over the last 33 years. They looked at studies that used every available brain imaging modality in ...

No-till agriculture may not bring hoped-for boost in global crop yields, study finds

2014-10-23
No-till farming, a key conservation agriculture strategy that avoids conventional plowing and otherwise disturbing the soil, may not bring a hoped-for boost in crop yields in much of the world, according to an extensive new meta-analysis by an international team led by the University of California, Davis. As the core principle of conservation agriculture, no-till has been promoted worldwide in an effort to sustainably meet global food demand. But after examining results from 610 peer-reviewed studies, the researchers found that no-till often leads to yield declines compared ...

New experiment provides route to macroscopic high-mass superpositions

2014-10-23
University of Southampton scientists have designed a new experiment to test the foundations of quantum mechanics at the large scale. Standard quantum theory places no limit on particle size and current experiments use larger and larger particles, which exhibit wave-like behaviour. However, at these masses experiments begin to probe extensions to standard quantum mechanics, which describe the apparent quantum-to-classical transition. Now, Southampton researchers, with colleagues from the University of Duisburg-Essen in Germany, have designed a new type of experiment ...

Added benefit of vedolizumab is not proven

2014-10-23
Vedolizumab (trade name Entyvio) has been approved since May 2014 for patients with moderately to severely active Crohn disease or ulcerative colitis. In an early benefit assessment pursuant to the Act on the Reform of the Market for Medicinal Products (AMNOG), the German Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG) examined whether the drug offers an added benefit over the appropriate comparator therapy in these patient groups. According to the findings, such an added benefit is not proven because the dossier contained no suitable data for any of the two ...

Rare diseases: No reason for lower demands for studies

2014-10-23
On behalf of the Federal Ministry of Health (BMG), the German Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG) examined whether specific methodological aspects have to be considered in the conduct, analysis and assessment of the certainty of results of studies on rare diseases. Within the framework of the same commission, the Institute also analysed the underlying studies for the approval of so-called orphan drugs, i.e. drugs for rare diseases, in Europe. The result: For a different approach than in more common diseases, there are neither scientific reasons ...

New policymaking tool for shift to renewable energy

2014-10-23
Multiple pathways exist to a low greenhouse gas future, all involving increased efficiency and a dramatic shift in energy supply away from fossil fuels. A new tool 'SWITCH' enables policymakers and planners to assess the economic and environmental implications of different energy scenarios. It is presented today at the congress Global Challenges: Achieving Sustainability, hosted by the University of Copenhagen. "SWITCH is a tool we can use to examine the different choices of technologies within the electrical power sector and their locations. It enables us to estimate ...

Teens whose parents exert more psychological control have trouble with closeness, independence

2014-10-23
For teenagers, learning to establish a healthy degree of autonomy and closeness in relationships (rather than easily giving in to peer pressure) is an important task. A new longitudinal study has found one reason adolescents struggle with balancing autonomy and closeness in relationships: parents' psychological control. Teens whose parents exerted more psychological control over them when they were 13 had more problems establishing friendships and romantic relationships that balanced closeness and independence, both in adolescence and into early adulthood. The study, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

FIFAWC: A dataset with detailed annotation and rich semantics for group activity recognition

Transfer learning-enhanced physics-informed neural network (TLE-PINN): A breakthrough in melt pool prediction for laser melting

Holistic integrative medicine declaration

Hidden transport pathways in graphene confirmed, paving the way for next-generation device innovation

New Neurology® Open Access journal announced

Gaza: 64,000 deaths due to violence between October 2023 and June 2024, analysis suggests

Study by Sylvester, collaborators highlights global trends in risk factors linked to lung cancer deaths

Oil extraction might have triggered small earthquakes in Surrey

Launch of world’s most significant protein study set to usher in new understanding for medicine

New study from Chapman University reveals rapid return of water from ground to atmosphere through plants

World's darkest and clearest skies at risk from industrial megaproject

UC Irvine-led discovery of new skeletal tissue advances regenerative medicine potential

Pulse oximeters infrequently tested by manufacturers on diverse sets of subjects

Press Registration is open for the 2025 AAN Annual Meeting

New book connects eugenics to Big Tech

Electrifying your workout can boost muscles mass, strength, UTEP study finds

Renewed grant will continue UTIA’s integrated pest management program

Researchers find betrayal doesn’t necessarily make someone less trustworthy if we benefit

Pet dogs often overlooked as spreader of antimicrobial-resistant Salmonella

Pioneering new tool will spur advances in catalysis

Physical neglect as damaging to children’s social development as abuse

Earth scientist awarded National Medal of Science, highest honor US bestows on scientists

Research Spotlight: Lipid nanoparticle therapy developed to stop tumor growth and restore tumor suppression

Don’t write off logged tropical forests – converting to oil palm plantations has even wider effects on ecosystems

Chimpanzees are genetically adapted to local habitats and infections such as malaria

Changes to building materials could store carbon dioxide for decades

EPA finalized rule on greenhouse gas emissions by power plants could reduce emissions with limited costs

Kangaroos kept a broad diet through late Pleistocene climate changes

Sex-specific neural circuits underlie shifting social preferences for male or female interaction among mice

The basis of voluntary movements: A groundbreaking study in ‘Science’ reveals the brain mechanisms controlling natural actions

[Press-News.org] Waste, an alternative source of energy to petroleum
The Department of Chemical Engineering of the UPV/EHU-University of the Basque Country has developed fundamental processes for producing raw materials and fuels using biomass and tires