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Biofuels explained Ethanol and biomass-based diesel

Biofuels are transportation fuels such as ethanol and biomass-based diesel fuel that are made from biomass materials. These fuels are usually blended with petroleum fuels (gasoline and distillate/diesel fuel and heating oil), but they can also be used on their own. Using ethanol or biodiesel reduces the consumption of gasoline and diesel fuel made from crude oil, which can reduce the amount of crude oil imported from other countries. Ethanol and biodiesel are also cleaner-burning fuels than pure gasoline and diesel fuel.

What is ethanol?

Ethanol is an alcohol fuel made from the sugars found in grains such as corn, sorghum, and barley.

Other sources of sugars to produce ethanol include

  • Sugar cane
  • Sugar beets
  • Potato skins
  • Rice
  • Yard clippings
  • Tree bark
  • Switchgrass

Most of the fuel ethanol used in the United States is distilled from corn. Scientists are working on ways to make ethanol from all parts of plants and trees rather than just grain and are experimenting with fast-growing woody crops such as poplar and willow trees and switchgrass to see if they can be used to produce ethanol.

Switchgrass can yield almost twice as much ethanol as corn, estimates geneticist Ken Vogel, who is conducting breeding and genetics research on switchgrass to improve its biomass yield and its ability to recycle carbon as a renewable energy crop. Photo by Brett Hampton.

United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) research geneticists study switchgrass as a source of ethanol.

Photo Credit: Brett Hampton, USDA Agricultural Research Service (Public Domain)

Ethanol is blended with gasoline

Nearly all of the gasoline now sold in the United States is about 10% ethanol by volume. Any gasoline-powered engine in the United States can use E10 (gasoline with 10% ethanol), but only specific types of vehicles can use mixtures with fuel containing more than 10% ethanol. A flexible-fuel vehicle can use gasoline with ethanol content greater than 10%. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ruled in October 2010 that cars and light trucks of model year 2007 and newer can use E15 (gasoline with 15% ethanol). E85, a fuel that contains 51%–83% ethanol, depending on location and season, is mainly sold in the Midwest and can only be used in a flexible-fuel vehicle.

What is biomass-based diesel fuel?

Biomass-based diesel fuels include biodiesel and renewable diesel. They are both called biomass-based diesel fuels because they are mostly produced for use in diesel engines, but they can also be used as heating fuels. Both fuels are made from biomass or materials derived from biomass, but they differ in how they are produced and in their physical properties. Biomass-based diesel fuels can be used in diesel engines without modifying the engines.

A standard gas and biodiesel pump.

A biodiesel and standard gasoline pump

Source: Stock photography (copyrighted)

Last updated: August 24, 2020