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Wiley InterScience | ||
![]() Microbial BiotechnologyVolume 1 Issue 3, Pages 211 - 225 Published Online: 11 Jan 2008 Journal compilation © 2010 Society for Applied Microbiology and Blackwell Publishing Ltd Published jointly with the Society for Applied Microbiology
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 410K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Review Microbial-based motor fuels: science and technology Copyright Journal compilation © 2007 Society for Applied Microbiology and Blackwell Publishing Ltd ABSTRACTThe production of biofuels via microbial biotechnology is a very active field of research. A range of fuel molecule types are currently under consideration: alcohols, ethers, esters, isoprenes, alkenes and alkanes. At the present, the major alcohol biofuel is ethanol. The ethanol fermentation is an old technology. Ongoing efforts aim to increase yield and energy efficiency of ethanol production from biomass. n-Butanol, another microbial fermentation product, is potentially superior to ethanol as a fuel but suffers from low yield and unwanted side-products currently. In general, biodiesel fuels consist of fatty acid methyl esters in which the carbon derives from plants, not microbes. A new biodiesel product, called microdiesel, can be generated in engineered bacterial cells that condense ethanol with fatty acids. Perhaps the best fuel type to generate from biomass would be biohydrocarbons. Microbes are known to produce hydrocarbons such as isoprenes, long-chain alkenes and alkanes. The biochemical mechanisms of microbial hydrocarbon biosynthesis are currently under study. Hydrocarbons and minimally oxygenated molecules may also be produced by hybrid chemical and biological processes. A broad interest in novel fuel molecules is also driving the development of new bioinformatics tools to facilitate biofuels research. Received 24 August, 2007; revised 16 November, 2007; accepted 26 November, 2007. |