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Is it feasible to blend isobutanol and diesel?

Context

  • Biofuel under consideration: Isobutanol – an alcohol compound with inflammable properties.
  • Agency: Automotive Research Association of India (ARAI) exploring blending with diesel.
  • Motivation: Ethanol blending with diesel was unsuccessful; isobutanol blends better with diesel.
  • Pilot Project: Expected duration ~18 months; if successful, India may become the first country to blend isobutanol with diesel.

Relevance:

  • GS3 (Economy / Energy / Environment): Alternative fuels, emission reduction, import substitution.
  • GS3 (Science & Technology): Biofuel production, fermentation technology, engine performance studies.

Production & Raw Material

  • Raw materials: Sugarcane syrup, molasses, grains, and other biomass sources used for ethanol production.
  • Production process:
    • Specially engineered microbes ferment natural sugars under sterile conditions.
    • Unlike conventional yeast for ethanol, these microbes are designed to produce isobutanol.
  • Infrastructure requirements:
    • Existing ethanol plants can be retrofitted:
      • Fermentation tanks slightly modified.
      • Distillation tanks to separate ethanol from isobutanol.
    • Example: 150 klp/d plant → 125 klp/d ethanol + 20 klp/d isobutanol with minimal changes.

Why Ethanol Was Discarded

  • Miscibility: Ethanol blends poorly with diesel.
  • Flash point concerns: Ethanol has a lower flash point → higher volatility → greater fire risk.
  • Surplus issue: Ethanol is already in surplus; government targets 20% blending with petrol.

Advantages of Isobutanol

  • Better blending with diesel: No need for efficiency complements.
  • Higher flash point than ethanol: Safer for storage and transport.
  • Emission benefits: Reduces pollutants and aids India’s net-zero targets.
  • Import substitution: Reduces dependence on fossil diesel imports.
  • Utilization of surplus biomass: Offers an alternative use for sugarcane molasses/syrup.

Challenges / Cons

  • Cetane number: Significantly lower than diesel → may reduce ignition quality and combustion efficiency.
  • Diesel knock risk: Uneven/premature combustion can damage engines and reduce power.
  • Miscibility issues with diesel: Requires blending with biodiesel to stabilize mixture.
  • Cost implications: Cetane-enhancing additives needed → incremental cost.
  • Blending limit: No more than 10% isobutanol recommended in diesel to avoid engine issues.
  • Further testing needed: Impacts vary by vehicle type and class; pilot studies essential.

Impact on Engine Performance

  • Potential positive: Reduced emissions, better environmental outcomes.
  • Potential negative:
    • Lower cetane → slower ignition, reduced power, risk of engine knock.
    • Proper additives required to restore performance.
  • Pilot study essential to determine optimal blending ratios and effects on different engines.

September 2025
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