IIT Mandi researchers use orange peels to convert biomass derived chemicals into biofuel precursors
India Today
Researchers at IIT Mandi has utilised orange-peel derived hydrochar to convert biomass-derived chemicals into biofuel precursors.
IIT Mandi researchers have employed hydrochar produced from orange peels as a catalyst to transform biomass-derived chemicals into biofuel precursors. The study will aid in the development of biomass-based fuels to address the socio-political instability caused by depleting petroleum supplies. The findings of the research which was led by Venkata Krishnan have been published recently in a journal 'Green Chemistry'.
After coal, oil, and natural gas, biomass-derived products from naturally occurring materials are currently India's fourth most significant energy source for meeting its energy requirements.
By employing various methods, lignocellulosic biomass obtained from forestry and agricultural waste can be transformed into a number of useful chemicals.
The employment of catalysts for conversion is particularly advantageous among these technologies since such processes use little energy and the kind of product created from biomass can also be regulated.
Hydrochar, which is typically obtained by heating biomass waste in the presence of water via a carbonization process, is the simplest and most low-cost catalyst studied by researchers.
Researchers from IIT Mandi used orange peels to catalyse the conversion of biomass-derived chemicals into biofuel precursors by heating dried orange peel powder with citric acid under pressure in a hydrothermal reactor for several hours.
READ: IIT Guwahati develops efficient catalytic systems from industrial wastes