Biofuels | Advanced Bio Fuels
Biofuels are fuels that can be processed from numerous types of biomass. First generation biofuels are processed from the sugars and vegetable oils formed in arable crops, which can be smoothly extracted applying conventional technology. In comparison, advanced biofuels are made from lignocellulosic biomass or woody crops, agricultural residues or waste, which makes it tougher to extract the requisite fuel. Advanced biofuel technologies have been devised because first generation biofuels manufacture has major limitations. First generation biofuel processes are convenient but restrained in most cases: there is a limit above which they cannot yield enough biofuel without forbidding food supplies and biodiversity. Many first-generation biofuels rely on subsidies and do not cost competitive with prevailing fossil fuels such as oil, and some of them yield only limited greenhouse gas emissions savings.
- Biofuels production and utilization
- Biofuels impact on food security
- Nonfood crops for biofuels production
- Cyanobacterial biofuels production
- Wastewater based algae biofuels production
- Advanced Biofuels
- Impact of biodiesel on pollutant emissions and public
- Applications of aviation biofuels
- Harvesting and oil extraction system
- Lignocellulosic Biomass
- Synthesis of advanced biofuels
- Microbial pathways for advanced biofuels product
- Thermochemical Routes
- Advanced biofuels from pyrolysis oil
- Second generation biofuels
- Development of bioenergy technology