You ask the technical questionwe will post the quick answer here
Question 01To : pannirbr,
thanks for mail, recently I am looking for bioethanol production from glycerol, I read teh article that glycerol can as source of bioethanol production by microbe (E .coli) fermentation. Is all the E coli can ferment this material? How I can get this microbe?
Thanks and awaiting your respones
Sincerely
Wiwid_ani
Original Message --
From: pannirbr
To: wiwid_ani
Sent: Apr 1 108, 9:48 pm EDT
Subject: Update your profile page
Answer by Pannirbr
These microbes are anerobic bacteria which you need to isolate from chicken manure .
Please see some interesting wel made recent research about making ethanol using syngas from netherland which you can easily find as resouce link page the last link .
This is very good project surely let us have more contact too.
As glycerol is very viscose one , gasification route seems to the economic energy path way for microbe to produce ethanol.Some type of food yeast such as Tourula , Candida can give both the etanol and protein .
the best source for your question you can easily obtain from the book Industrial microbiology by Prescot and Dun.
Feel free to read , comment and contribute here .For the same I wish to help.
We , Rajesh from Thailand , I am from Brazil too look towads glycerol use for gasification , then ethanol via gas to liquid route .Surely you may join too this technological route, where I have already have experience of immobilized microbes very goog for anerobicos mixed culture of microbes , which can be easily scaled up in trickle bed reactor.
You are welcome to jion with us , as GM , very big company too are very ahead of us , we can move , but slowly, one day by joint effort can win too
Yours truely
Pannirselvam
-- Original Message --
From: wiwid_ani
To: pannirbr
Sent: Apr 1 108, 6:25 pm EDT
Subject: petrol engine
Both diesel engines and gasoline engines covert fuel into energy through a series of small explosions or combustions. The major difference between diesel and gasoline is the way these explosions happen. In a gasoline engine, fuel is mixed with air, compressed by pistons and ignited by sparks from spark plugs. In a diesel engine, however, the air is compressed first, and then the fuel is injected. Because air heats up when it's compressed, the fuel ignites(more pressure nearly double the gasiline engine)
See animation , to know how they work
http://auto.howstuffworks.com/diesel1.htm
-- Original Message --
From: melwayne
To: pannirbr
Sent: Oct 12 2009, 6:28 am EDT
Subject: petrol vs diesel
hello
could you please explain the difference between a diesel engine and a petrol engine.
thank you
melwayne
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