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Nuclear-driven production of renewable fuel additives from waste organics

Chemistry

Nuclear-driven production of renewable fuel additives from waste organics

A. G. Plant, B. Kos, et al.

This groundbreaking research by Arran George Plant and colleagues harnesses nuclear energy to transform waste glycerol from biodiesel production into valuable chemicals like solketal and acetol. With impressive radiation-chemical yields, this innovative approach could significantly boost production and help achieve net-zero emissions targets by utilizing existing European nuclear facilities.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Non-intermittent, low-carbon energy from nuclear or biofuels is integral to many strategies to achieve Carbon Budget Reduction targets. However, nuclear plants have high, upfront costs and biodiesel manufacture produces waste glycerol with few secondary uses. Combining these technologies, to precipitate valuable feedstocks from waste glycerol using ionizing radiation, could diversify nuclear energy use whilst valorizing biodiesel waste. Here, we demonstrate solketal (2,2-dimethyl-1,3-dioxolane-4-yl) and acetol (1-hydroxypropan-2-one) production is enhanced in selected aqueous glycerol-acetone mixtures with γ radiation with yields of 1.5 ± 0.2 µmol J−1 and 1.8 ± 0.2 µmol J−1, respectively. This is consistent with the generation of either the stabilized, protonated glycerol cation (CH2OH-CHOH-CH2OH2+) from the direct action of glycerol, or the hydronium species, H3O+, via water radiolysis, and their role in the subsequent acid-catalyzed mechanisms for acetol and solketal production. Scaled to a hypothetically compatible range of nuclear facilities in Europe (i.e., contemporary Pressurised Water Reactor designs or spent nuclear fuel stores), we estimate annual solketal production at approximately (1.0 ± 0.1) × 10^4 t year−1. Given a forecast increase of 5% to 20% v/v% in the renewable proportion of commercial petroleum blends by 2030, nuclear-driven, biomass-derived solketal could contribute towards net-zero emissions targets, combining low-carbon co-generation and co-production.
Publisher
Communications Chemistry
Published On
Sep 17, 2021
Authors
Arran George Plant, Bor Kos, Anže Jazbec, Luka Snoj, Vesna Najdanovic-Visak, Malcolm John Joyce
Tags
nuclear energy
waste glycerol
solketal
acetol
biodiesel
radiation-chemical yields
net-zero emissions
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