Sea water to jet fuel

November 26, 2009  

water1_istockIt’s true; you can make fuel out of just about anything these days. Scientists in the US Navy are making jet fuel out of sea water. Using a variation on the same technique used to make hydrocarbon fuels from syngas (derived from coal), they can extract carbon dioxide from the sea water.

Then, it can be further processed into unsaturated short-chain hydrocarbons, and refined into a kerosene-like fuel. The CO2 found in sea water is about 140 times more concentrated than in the air, making the ocean a veritable gold mine for this process.

With water, water everywhere, not a drop to drink, the Navy figured it should find some use for it other than floating their boats. With the threat of global warming, glaciers and icebergs melting, sea levels rising, maybe using sea water for fuel isn’t such a bad idea. After all, there may be a surplus.

Of course, they are developing it as a “clean” energy – or they will, provided they find the best catalyst; one that will create a minimum of carbon or methane during the process. Which means the glaciers and icebergs will not be melting, and there will not be a surplus of sea water…

But maybe the key here is using CO2- extracted from any source- as a fuel. This could solve a number of the worlds’ current problems, included global warming, and reliance on foreign oil.

Recycle CO2 as a fuel source, and reduce it in the atmosphere as well.

Comments

Feel free to leave a comment...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!