Catch bacteria that provide fuel for cars
US scientists have found a way to produce biofuels for cars and motor vehicles with a normal bacterium in the soil.
US scientists have found a way to produce biofuels for cars and motor vehicles with a normal bacterium in the soil.
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the US has a project to study the method of producing fuel from bacteria. The goal of the project is to create 10 times more efficient fuel than current biofuels. Researchers swapped genes of R. eutropha so that it could produce isobutanol - an alcohol that could be replaced or mixed with gasoline for transportation, Innovation News Daily reported.
Bacteria R. eutropha
"We have shown that humans can produce a lot of isobutanol in the future," said Christopher Brigham, an MIT biologist.
Many scientists have studied bacteria that make biofuels in their bodies. However, they must destroy the bacteria to get fuel. The MIT team does not kill bacteria, because they have found a way for bacteria to release fuel from their bodies.
The bacteria in nature store carbon by making carbon polymers - compounds like plastics made from oil. Brigham and colleagues removed many genes from R. eutropha, and added some genes to synthesize isobutanol instead of carbon polymer.
The team hopes the bacterium R. eutropha can convert carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) into fuel. This is one of the ways to utilize the greenhouse gas CO 2 to produce fuel and reduce the rate of global warming. In addition, the team considered the possibility of utilizing carbon from other sources, such as agricultural waste and urban waste.
- Turns the paper into 'gasoline'
- The explorer uses electricity generated by bacteria
- Coffee bodies will make fuel run cars
- What is the gasoline of other F1 petrol cars?
- Solar cars: Dreams are real
- E.coli bacteria are also helpful
- Find out the location of the car fuel tank cap
- System for turning CO2 into fuel for engines in Canada
- Students who make cars can run nearly 3,000 km with a liter of gasoline
- Misplacing fuel can destroy cars
New bacteria appear in unexpected places E.coli bacteria can produce diesel Research peach tree genome to produce fuel Converting waste cooking oil into biofuel Producing chemicals and biofuels from wood biomass Green fuel from corn waste Project to turn desert into ... forest New step in bioenergy development