US-based advanced renewable fuel and biochemical platform technology company, Gevo, Inc., has announced that it has entered into an agreement with Clariant Corp., one of the world’s leading speciality chemical companies, to develop catalysts to enable Gevo’s ethanol-to-olefins (ETO) technology. ETO enables the use of ethanol as a feedstock to produce tailored mixes of propylene, isobutylene and hydrogen for use as standalone molecules or as feedstock to produce other biochemcials or biofuels.
According to a statement, underpinning the ETO technology was the company’s invention of proprietary mixed metal oxide catalysts that produce polymer-grade propylene or high purity isobutylene, along with hydrogen in high yields in a single processing step from conventional fuel grade specification ethanol.
Clariant is committed to the development and scale-up of the catalyst, which is expected to continue the advancement of the ETO technology, while Gevo focuses the majority of its internal resources on the ongoing optimization of its core isobutanol technology. Once the ETO technology has been successfully developed and scaled-up, Clariant will be in a position to produce quantities of the catalyst needed to meet commercial production requirements.
We see the opportunity for Clariant catalysts to convert ethanol, produced from cellulosic or other carbohydrate sources, into more value-added products to create greater growth potential for the ethanol industry, said Stefan Brejc, Head of Specialty Catalysts Business Segment at Clariant.
As with its isobutanol technology, Gevo anticipates growing its ETO business through licensing having the potential to provide the estimated 25 billion (US) gallon (≈ 94.6 billion litre) global ethanol industry with a much broader set of end-product market and margin opportunities, beyond the use of ethanol as a gasoline blendstock.
It has the potential to address a variety of markets in the chemicals and fuels fields, such as automobile parts, packaging, durable goods made of plastic, renewable diesel fuel and renewable hydrogen for the chemical, energy and fuel cell markets.
We are pleased to be working with Clariant. They have tremendous capability and know-how to scale-up developmental, customized catalysts to enable commercialization of new, large-scale processes. We see the potential with this technology to address several major opportunities cutting across chemicals, plastics, fuels and hydrogen, said Dr Patrick Gruber, CEO of Gevo.