Forget about Hydrogen: The Methanol Economy
George Olah, winner of the 1994 Nobel Prize in chemistry, discusses the Methanol Economy in an interview with the Technology Review. Methanol, just like Hydrogen, is not a source of energy like gasoline but an energy carrier. But Methanol can be pumped pretty much just like we pump gas now, and can be mixed with gasoline or used in methanol fuel cells. Methanol can be produced by converting natural gas, in a new efficient way. A second, more fascinating approach consists of combining CO2 with water and electrically reducing it to methanol. The idea was conceived after inventing the methanol fuel cell, which produces CO2 and water. They found out they could actually reverse the process and produce methanol. This opens up the possibility for using CO2 from flue gases at power plants, or taken CO2 out of the air. [Source: Technology Review]
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Keith 6:46PM (5/07/2006)
This really makes a lot of sense. You are never going to get rid of CO2, so why not recycle it?
Question. How do they get rid of CO2 on nuclear submarines and spacecraft? :-B
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Stphane Dumas 6:47PM (5/07/2006)
more links about methanol, the Wikipedia entry http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methanol and this French site can mention then methanol could be produced from biomass (they called it "biomethanol" and ethanol produced from biomass is sometimes called "bioethanol")but currently there no industrial installation who experiment it yet. http://lasen.epfl.ch/page40002.html
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Alexander Drummond 8:53PM (5/07/2006)
Why not Butanol? It too is compatabile with current infrastructure, and tops methanol in the amount of energy it contains. Biobutanol is quite a possibility.
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Carney 9:23AM (9/16/2009)
Why choose? With a fully flex-fueled vehicle, the technology for which exists right now, a car would be able to run equally easily on any alcohol fuel - methanol, ethanol, propanol, butanol, you name it.