Mindaugas posted this url previously, here's the full story:

http://www.urc.ukans.edu/News/96N/NovNews/Nov05/diesel.html

Alternative diesel fuel
November 5, 1996

Science

KU RESEARCHER ADDS A DOSE OF SUGAR TO DIESEL FUEL
LAWRENCE - A recipe for an alternative diesel fuel using agriculture 
resources found in Kansas begins with a liberal dose of something not 
normally used in engine fuels - sugar.

The primary goal of a University of Kansas researcher is to 
demonstrate technology that can convert grass, stalks, trash, farm 
byproducts, surplus grains and corn stover - corn stalks without the 
ears - into sugar for use as the primary component in fuel for diesel 
engines.

"It's not a question of if sugar will work," said Galen Suppes, 
assistant professor of chemical and petroleum engineering. "It's only 
a question of when these fuels will be less expensive than diesel 
fuels."

Suppes estimates that this alternative fuel using sugars "costs 
considerably less than ethanol or methanol made from biomass and 
should cost less than diesel."

"We know the technology is there to convert many forms of biomass to 
sugars," Suppes said. "In fact, we are developing technology to give 
these fuels exceptional fuel quality. The problem is one of 
perception - of using sugar as the primary component of a fuel 
recipe."

In fact, he said, KU researchers have already made these fuels run in 
conventional diesel engines. Tests have been so successful that a 
provisional patent application has been filed with the U.S. Patent 
Office on the fuel mixtures, with a final patent application expected 
to be filed this summer.

"It's better to plan ahead and work with engine manufacturers and 
develop engines which can use both conventional and alternative 
diesel fuels," he said.

According to Suppes, you normally can't use sugar in a gas engine. 
"Gas engines have injectors and carburetors that rely on fuel 
evaporating, and sugar doesn't evaporate," he said.

Diesel engines are different, he said, because the fuel is sprayed 
into the cylinder at very high temperatures, where it evaporates, 
burns and ignites before it can solidify.

"Placing sugar directly into diesel fuel would also foul up the 
system," Suppes said. "But put sugar in a soluble mixture, and you 
have a viable alternative fuel."

In fact, research shows that a diesel fuel composed of nearly 15 
percent water, 20 percent to 30 percent methanol or ethanol, and 50 
percent to 75 percent syrup - water and sugar - is an attractive 
recipe for the fuel.

What is missing from the equation is the proper amount of cetane 
improver. Cetane numbers rate the ignition properties of diesel 
fuels, just as octane numbers determine the quality and value of 
gasoline.

A recent diesel engine test at KU was successful using a fuel mixture 
of 54 percent syrup - 7.5 grams water and 46.5 grams of sugar; 8 
percent cetane improver; and 38 percent methanol.

"The demonstration of a fuel comprised of greater than 50 percent 
syrup was a significant research milestone," Suppes said. "It will be 
easier to improve upon this fuel than it was to make the initial 
demonstration. We intend to meet the goal of being less expensive 
than diesel for select markets by 2005."

Researchers at KU have developed a combuster, a device to estimate 
cetane numbers. By blending and synthesizing fuels and additives, 
they evaluate the cetane numbers in the combuster.

Once a desirable fuel blend is found, it is tested in a laboratory 
engine. Funding for cetane-improver research into conventional diesel 
fuel comes from the Kansas Soybean Commission, the KU Energy Research 
Center and the Kansas Value Added Center.

Suppes said a partnership initiated between the U.S. government and 
Ford, Chrysler and General Motors expected diesel engines to replace 
gas engines by 2010.

"Economically competitive fuels and fuel additives could provide a 
large source of revenue and new jobs in Kansas," he said. "Surplus 
grain commodities could be used in these biofuel markets to eliminate 
the reductions in grain prices which occur during years of high and 
record production."

Suppes also suspects that such markets could double the net farm 
income of farmers and lead to sustainable prosperity in rural Kansas.

Story by Dann Hayes, (785) 864-8854

-30-

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