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Biofuels and bioenergy [electronic resource] : processes and technologies / Sunggyu Lee and Y.T. Shah.

By: Lee, Sunggyu.
Contributor(s): Shah, Yatish T.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Green chemistry and chemical engineering: Publisher: Boca Raton, Fla. : CRC Press, 2013Description: xvii, 323 p. : ill.ISBN: 9781420089561 (ebook : PDF).Subject(s): Biomass energyGenre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: No titleOnline resources: Distributed by publisher. Purchase or institutional license may be required for access. Also available in print edition.
Contents:
1. Introduction to biofuels and bioenergy -- 2. Crop oils, biodiesel, and algae fuels -- 3. Ethanol from corn -- 4. Ethanol from lignocellulose -- 5. Fast pyrolysis and gasification of biomass -- 6. Conversion of waste to biofuels, bioproducts, and bioenergy -- 7. Mixed feedstock.
Summary: "Preface Humans have a long history of using a wide variety of biomass resources as sources of energy and fuel. The discovery and use of fossil energy, represented largely by coal, natural gas, and petroleum, have drastically reduced the utilization of biomass fuels. The technologies of generating electricity using biomass, producing bioliquid fuels, and powering motor vehicles using bioalcohols and blended gasolines have been developed and practiced since the early twentieth century. Up until recently, however, development interest in biofuels had lessened due to the availability of relatively inexpensive fossil energy resources as well as the handling and transportation convenience of these conventional fuel sources. Due to the strong growth of global transportation fuel demand, sharply escalating worldwide fossil energy prices, fear over the dwindling supply of petroleum and natural gas for the near future, and credible evidence linking global warming and climate change issues with the emission of greenhouse gases, global interest and R&D efforts in renewable alternative fuels have become intense and fiercely competitive, targeting both short- and long-term solutions to alternative energy needs. Although there are a number of options and routes for energy sustainability and independence via renewable alternative energy, bioenergy and biofuels certainly possess outstanding potential to provide solutions and relief to many of the immediate, intermediate, and long-term societal needs of clean energy and their associated challenges"-- Provided by publisher.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

1. Introduction to biofuels and bioenergy -- 2. Crop oils, biodiesel, and algae fuels -- 3. Ethanol from corn -- 4. Ethanol from lignocellulose -- 5. Fast pyrolysis and gasification of biomass -- 6. Conversion of waste to biofuels, bioproducts, and bioenergy -- 7. Mixed feedstock.

"Preface Humans have a long history of using a wide variety of biomass resources as sources of energy and fuel. The discovery and use of fossil energy, represented largely by coal, natural gas, and petroleum, have drastically reduced the utilization of biomass fuels. The technologies of generating electricity using biomass, producing bioliquid fuels, and powering motor vehicles using bioalcohols and blended gasolines have been developed and practiced since the early twentieth century. Up until recently, however, development interest in biofuels had lessened due to the availability of relatively inexpensive fossil energy resources as well as the handling and transportation convenience of these conventional fuel sources. Due to the strong growth of global transportation fuel demand, sharply escalating worldwide fossil energy prices, fear over the dwindling supply of petroleum and natural gas for the near future, and credible evidence linking global warming and climate change issues with the emission of greenhouse gases, global interest and R&D efforts in renewable alternative fuels have become intense and fiercely competitive, targeting both short- and long-term solutions to alternative energy needs. Although there are a number of options and routes for energy sustainability and independence via renewable alternative energy, bioenergy and biofuels certainly possess outstanding potential to provide solutions and relief to many of the immediate, intermediate, and long-term societal needs of clean energy and their associated challenges"-- Provided by publisher.

Also available in print edition.

Mode of access: World Wide Web.

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