Originally posted by Macavity
- Properly refined, can it combust / lubricate to the same degree as regular oil?
- Is it more or less corrosive against common metals?
- What are production and combustion emissions like compared to regular oil?
- Can it give a comparable fuel yield to traditional biodiesel crops?
Using technology licensed from a NASA project, GreenFuel builds bioreactors--in the shape of 3-meter-high glass tubes fashioned as a triangle--to grow algae. The algae are fed with sunlight, water and carbon-carrying emissions from power plants. The algae are then harvested and turned into biodiesel fuel.
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1) Conversion of current power plants from, say, coal or natural gas to biodiesel or biodiesel/dry biomass, possibly with an adjunct facility to convert harvested algae into biodiesel and dry-biomass fuels.
2) A further reduction in greenhouse-gas emissions (and possibly other emissions as well), especially if the bioreactors are installed in the post-scrubber smokestacks.
Note: I am neither a chemist or biochemist, nor do I play one on TV. I'm just wondering how pollutants other than the ones intended to be removed by the algae would impact the algae itself.
Also, speaking of alternative energy technologies, has anyone mentioned the pros and cons of photovoltaic cell and/or wind-turbine arrays as an energy source?
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