4.8 Article

A combined photobiological-photochemical route to C10 cycloalkane jet fuels from carbon dioxide via isoprene

Journal

GREEN CHEMISTRY
Volume 24, Issue 24, Pages 9602-9619

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2gc03272d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swedish Energy Agency
  2. Formas
  3. NordForsk NCoE Program NordAqua
  4. Swedish Research Council
  5. [2017-00862]
  6. [44728-1 and 52576-1]

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This study explores the direct production of bio-isoprene from carbon dioxide using engineered photosynthetic cyanobacteria. The researchers successfully converted isoprene into limonene and other hydrocarbons through photochemical processes. The resulting isoprene dimers can be used as drop-in jet fuels that meet the criteria for energy density, flashpoint, viscosity, density, and freezing point. Life-cycle assessment indicates the potential for environmentally sustainable fuel production.
The hemiterpene isoprene is a volatile C-5 hydrocarbon with industrial applications. It is generated today from fossil resources, but can also be made in biological processes. We have utilized engineered photosynthetic cyanobacteria for direct, light-driven production of bio-isoprene from carbon dioxide, and show that isoprene in a subsequent photochemical step, using either near-UV or simulated or natural solar light, can be dimerized into limonene, paradiprene, and isomeric C10H16 hydrocarbons (monoterpenes) in high yields under photosensitized conditions (above 90% after 44 hours with near-UV and 61% with simulated solar light). The optimal sensitizer in our experiments is di(naphth-1-yl)methanone which we use with a loading of 0.1 mol%. It can also easily be recycled for subsequent photodimerization cycles. The isoprene dimers generated are a mixture of [2 + 2], [4 + 2] and [4 + 4] cycloadducts, and after hydrogenation this mixture is nearly ideal as a drop-in jet fuel. Importantly the photodimerization can be carried out at ambient conditions. However, the high content of hydrogenated [2 + 2] dimers in our isoprene dimer mix lowers the flash point below the threshold (38 degrees C); yet, these dimers can be converted thermally into [4 + 2] and [4 + 4] dimers. When hydrogenated these monoterpenoids fully satisfy the criteria for drop-in jet fuels with regard to energy density, flashpoint, kinematic viscosity, density, and freezing point. Life-cycle assessment results show a potential to produce the fuel in an environmentally sustainable way.

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