| Feng
Chia University has succeeded in boosting the production of hydrogen from
biomass to 15 liters per hour, one of the world’s top biohydrogen production
rates, a researcher at the university said yesterday.
Lin Chiu-yu, dean of the Feng Chia
College of Engineering, told a news conference that in 1998 the university
began to use facultative anaerobic organisms to produce hydrogen gas that
could one day power fuel cells in cars and other devices.
PILOT PLANT
Last year, the university built Taiwan’s
first model system for the production of biomass energy, called the “Biomass
Energy Pilot Plant.” There, a research team managed to produce hydrogen
and carbon dioxide from the fermentation of different strains of anaerobes
in a sugar cane-based liquefied mixture.
Lin said that so far, the plant’s
hydrogen production rate from biomass using a one-liter reactor has reached
15.09 liters per hour per liter of reactor volume, a world-class standard.
EFFICIENCY
To date, the most efficient hydrogen
producer has been the bacteria clostridium, said the Feng Chia research
team.
The bacteria exists in largest quantities
at wastewater treatment plants.
Lin said the plant controls patent
pre-treatment technologies to screen out the perfect anaerobe for their
search.
Feng Chia University chief secretary
Lin Liang-tai said the plant has drawn more than 40 experts from 15 countries
around the world to visit. |