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Tuesday, March 03, 2009
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Cold Weather Testing Soy Biodiesel

ALASKA - A team of scientists, researchers, soybean farmers and truckers will be in Alaska from 5-10 March for cold weather testing of soy biodiesel.

The Indiana Soybean Alliance has joined forces with the Univesity of Alaska Fairbanks School of Natural Resources and Agricultural Sciences to road test Permaflo Biodiesel at northern latitudes.

"We want to highlight the versatility of Permaflo Biodiesel in two different cold climate applications, namely stationary power and transportation," said Megan Kuhn, communications director for Indiana Soybean Alliance.

The team will fly from Indiana to Anchorage and drive vehicles powered with biodiesel to Fairbanks. Part of the crew will continue the drive to the Arctic Circle where they will camp with a generator that runs on biodiesel.

Permaflo Biodiesel is a unique formulation of biodiesel that is processed to significantly reduce the traditional problems of biodiesel performance in cold-weather conditions.

The process changes the chemical composition of biodiesel to lower the cloud point temperature-the point when crystallization starts and the oil begins to appear clouded.

The biodiesel is capable of working at temperatures down to minus 67 degrees Fahrenheit without gelling. Purdue University professor Bernie Tao created the technology with funding from the Indiana Soybean Alliance.

Tao contacted UAF assistant professor Andy Soria at the Palmer Research and Extension Center for collaboration on the Alaska testing project. Soria studies Alaska trees to see if they have could be used to create biofuel and bio-based products.

A pioneer in the liquefaction of wood using supercritical fluids, Soria is building a biofuel laboratory at the Palmer Research and Extension Center to develop and test biofuels made from low-grade wood, woody biomass, and fire- and insect-killed trees.

TheBioenergySite News Desk


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