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Centia™ Biofuels Process Produces Bio-gasoline Similar to Traditional Unleaded Gasoline
ARIZONA - Diversified Energy Corporation announced today that the Centia™ process, during a recent demonstration, produced a bio-gasoline fuel very similar to traditional unleaded gasoline.Centia™ is an advanced biofuels production process that takes any
renewable oil input source (e.g. oils derived from agriculture crops, algae, animal fats, waste
greases, etc.) and produces transportation fuels that are 1-for-1 replacements for petroleum jet
fuel, diesel, and gasoline. Fuels produced from Centia™ could be operated in engines, stored,
and distributed in an identical manner to fossil fuels today. The process was developed in 2006
by North Carolina State University (NCSU) and has been licensed exclusively by Diversified
Energy®.
The tests were conducted at NCSU using demonstration reactors, operated under temperature
and pressure with a proprietary catalyst developed specifically for the Centia™ bio-gasoline
process. Starting with an input mimicking what would have originated as soybean oil, the
process generated a fuel closely resembling the carbon number profile and molecular
composition of unleaded gasoline. A mass conversion efficiency in excess of 90% was achieved.
Further development, optimization, and testing activities are being planned, including an end-to-end
Centia™ system demonstration to make bio-gasoline, Jet A-1/JP-8 (jet fuel), and renewable
diesel. Dr. Henry Lamb, NCSU Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering and lead
investigator on the bio-gasoline work, remarked, “The team is extremely encouraged with the
bio-gasoline results generated to date. With over 243 million vehicles on U.S. roads (with a
majority using gasoline), finding an affordable renewable drop-in replacement would be a major
achievement. While additional development work is still required, these results emphasize the
potential of Centia™ to produce a variety of 2nd-generation biofuels.”
In addition to the bio-gasoline results, a number of other Centia™ achievements have occurred in
the last year. First, the team has completed the construction and demonstration of a glycerol
burner that will safely burn the glycerol byproduct from Centia™ and provide an energy source
back into the process. This same burner could make productive use of the crude glycerol
generated from traditional transesterification-based biodiesel plants. Next, continued
development work has occurred on various steps in the process to show that the fundamental
chemistry works regardless of renewable oil input source. Also, a bench-scale hydrolysis reactor
(used for the first step in the process) has been fabricated in preparation for the end-to-end
system demonstration. Lastly, Diversified Energy has formed relationships with other
engineering companies to provide expertise in commercialization activities such as large-scale
process design and construction and catalyst regeneration and recovery.
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