Technology Solutions: Biodiesel boom creates glut ... - ACS Publications

Technology Solutions: Biodiesel boom creates glut of glycerin. ERIKA ENGELHAUPT ... Fatty acid methyl esters production with glycerol metal alkoxide c...
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Technology▼Solutions Biodiesel boom creates glut of glycerin

© 2007 American Chemical Society

that tons of glycerin were starting to pour out of biodiesel plants, Suppes took notice. Sure enough, the surplus glycerin soon caused prices to plummet from $1.10/lb to 25¢/lb. Today, biodiesel refineries practically give the stuff away just to get it NATIONAL BIODIESEL BOARD

Corn-based ethanol gets a lot of attention these days, but industry runs on diesel. The biodiesel industry hopes to provide a “green” alternative to petroleum-based diesel by squeezing fuel from plants and waste materials like turkey innards. The idea is starting to catch on; sales shot up from 5 million gallons (gal) in 2001 to 250 million gal in 2006, and Virgin Trains launched Europe’s first biodiesel train in June. But as researchers hunt for new ways to turn unwanted resources into fuel, the industry has created a waste problem of its own: glycerin (also known as glycerol). Biodiesel production creates about 0.8 pounds (lb) of glycerin per gallon of fuel. That added up to about 200 million lb of glycerin in 2006—or nearly half of total U.S. glycerin consumption, according to the National Biodiesel Board. Galen Suppes, a chemical engineer at the University of Missouri Columbia, saw a big opportunity. Suppes won a Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge Award in 2006 for pioneering a process that turns glycerin into propylene glycol. Supplies of propylene glycol—used in cosmetics, food, and pharmaceuticals and as nontoxic antifreeze—are tight. Global demand for the chemical, which is normally made from petroleum, exceeds 3 billion lb per year, according to Dow Chemical Co. “In a nutshell, my motivation is a balance between being environmentally friendly and economically feasible,” Suppes says. Over the past several years, Suppes and the company he cofounded, Renewable Alternatives, have taken the awardwinning chemistry from the lab to industrial application. In 2002, Suppes attended a brainstorming session in New Orleans on the future of biofuels. When the National Biodiesel Board mentioned

Biodiesel plants are looking for ways to turn excess glycerin into dollars. Shown here is the REG, Inc., plant in Ralston, Iowa.

out of their storage tanks. Last year, Dow, which once held a virtual monopoly on glycerin, closed its plant in Freeport, Texas. Researchers started looking for ways to use glycerin; some experimented with adding it to animal feed or even spraying it on dirt roads to keep dust down. “Smaller producers were even having to landfill it,” says William (Rusty) Sutterlin, CEO of Renewable Alternatives. Suppes realized that simply stripping one hydroxyl group from glycerin would yield propylene glycol. In 2003, he teamed with Sutterlin, then a Ph.D. student in chemistry at the University of Missouri Columbia. At first, the company focused strictly on creating antifreeze made of glycerin mixed with propylene gly-

col. But industry contacts soon led them to aim for pure propylene glycol. Their product is now more than 99.8% pure, and can be used as industrial feedstock and as antifreeze. “One of the greatest environmental impacts we can have is replacing ethylene glycol as antifreeze,” Suppes says. Even though crop production may be too limited for biofuels to be the ultimate energy solution, he feels good about developing renewable processes that reduce dependence on petroleum resources, he says. Renewable Alternatives licensed the patented process to Washingtonbased Senergy Chemical. Senergy has partnered with a chemical plant in an undisclosed location in the Southeast that is currently retrofitting for the process and is expected to start producing propylene glycol at the end of the year, says Senergy president Mark Tegen. Big players in the agrochemical industry like Dow and Archer Daniels Midland Co. (ADM) smell the profit potential and are scrambling to follow suit. In 2005, ADM announced it will build its own plant to make propylene glycol and ethylene glycol from corn and soybeans using its own technology. Sutterlin and Tegen say that competition is stiff, but they have the upper hand. “We will probably be the first to market,” Sutterlin says. Glycerin “is an advantage for [the] biodiesel industry” now, says Steve Howell, technical director for the National Biodiesel Board. With another renewable product to sell, “biodiesel has a one-two punch for substituting petroleum-derived chemicals,” he adds. (For more on biofuels, visit a blog with news and observations about biofuels research in Brazil from ES&T’s Erika Engelhaupt and Chemical & Engineering News’s Stephen Ritter at http://cenbrazil.wordpress. com.) —ERIKA ENGELHAUPT

AUGUST 1, 2007 / ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY ■ 5175