Researchers at the University of Delaware-led Catalysis Center for Energy Innovation (CCEI) and investigators from its partner institutions are working to develop a strategy for making lubricants from biomass.

Lubricants are essential for a modern economy keeping the world moving while they take a noteworthy amount of crude oil supply for base stock. The new research provides a strategy to create renewable lubricant base oils efficiently from non-food biomass.

CCEI researchers at UD have outlined a strategy to create renewable lubricants from non-food biomass, such as woodchips (above), grass, and other organic waste. Image Credit: Jaynell Keely, University of Delaware. Click image for the largest view.

Engines, gears, transmissions, plane thrusters, refrigerator compressors, wind turbines – the list of important industrial machinery, agricultural equipment, transportation vessels, construction equipment and home applications that depend on lubricants might be endless. These slick substances quite literally keep the world turning, touching nearly every facet of modern life and comprising a global industry worth more than $60 billion dollars annually.

As essential as they are to our way of life, lubricants leave a heavy environmental footprint. Common lubricants, oils, greases and emollients typically consist of mineral, or petroleum, base oils – often up to 90 percent by weight. Mineral base oils are volatile and tend to breakdown thicken and simply wear out or become dirty, which means that lubricants need to be replaced often, generating waste. Some used products are recycled, some are leaked or spilled and some are dumped into land fills or the environment.

Synthetic base oils are key to efficient lubricants – owing to their better lubrication properties, stability, and suitability for extreme temperatures compared to their regular mineral-base oils counterparts – but producing them with tunable (i.e. customizable) structures and specifications can be both challenging and expensive. This lack of tunability creates a need for mixing the base-oil with several expensive additives, increasing the environmental footprint of lubricants.

Researchers at the University of Delaware-led Catalysis Center for Energy Innovation (CCEI) and investigators from its partner institutions are working to solve these problems. Their findings report a strategy to create renewable lubricant base oils efficiently from non-food biomass – things like wood, switchgrass and other sustainable, organic waste – and fatty acids, which are present in used vegetable oils and animal fat.

The group’s research has been published in the latest issue of Science Advances, and an international patent application has been filed to secure intellectual property rights for their innovative methods.

Dion Vlachos, founder and director of CCEI and the Allan and Myra Ferguson Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering said, “This is one of the first attempts to make renewable lubricants from abundant raw materials, and in a very precise chemical way so that the architecture of these large molecules is dialed in, something unachievable using crude oil. The product is clearly a high-performance material with tunable properties, unlike anything in the market.”

Basu Saha, associate director at CCEI, points to catalysis as the key to synthesizing these new base-oils.

“Catalysts are used to accelerate chemical reactions and create new materials,” Saha said. “For lubricants, catalysis allows researchers to not only synthesize new and existing structurally similar base-oils from bio-based feedstock, but lends extensive control over the molecules’ weight, size distribution, branching and specifications.”

Produced base oils are suitable for a wide range of existing applications without requiring high amounts of additives in the lubricant formulation, said Sibao Liu, a postdoctoral researcher at UD and one of the paper’s co-authors.

“We’ve provided a new, efficient and versatile catalytic reaction pathway for synthesis of renewable lubricants with tunable properties,” Liu added. “We hope this could eventually displace the manufacturing process for some lubricants used today and minimize environmental carbon footprint, though there is still a long way to go.”

The press release isn’t saying so but one would hope that these lubricant bases would be more biodegradable. That would be an improvement along with not consuming crude oil, even though lubricants are a quite small part of crude oil’s total use.

Meanwhile, not all additives are going to disappear and some are very much not something one wants spilled or dumped. But however this technology gains market traction,, it will be a good thing as synthetics are a good way to get better economy both in machine life and fuel consumption.


Comments

1 Comment so far

  1. Nikunj on September 28, 2020 2:46 AM

    Renewable biomass has received tremendous awareness in recent years. The lubricants are very essential and having a huge demand in the market. The recycled particles are being converted into lubricant that is useful for industries such as agriculture, mining, construction, and many more.

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