http://www.snugroups.org/applications/making_methanol.html
Where can I get the name of that little bugger? I've searched and searched but to no avail.
Methane is about 21 times as destructive as CO2 as a greenhouse gas. Yet it's an excellent fuel. Natural gas is usually either methane-based or propane-based. When burned, it exhausts carbon - but if produced from living matter, it can only exhaust as much as it just took in from the atmosphere.
Everything from switchgrass to livestock manure to grease can be easily converted to methane by anaerobic digestion. But can't be transported easily. Conversion to liquid form would solve a host of problems and the methanol could fairly easily be converted to serve as a drop-in replacement for gasoline.
So, where the heck do I find this bacteria?!
2007-12-11
13:35:44
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1 answers
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asked by
Anonymous
in
Environment
➔ Alternative Fuel Vehicles