Research article - Peer-reviewed, 2022
A combined photobiological-photochemical route to C-10 cycloalkane jet fuels from carbon dioxide via isoprene
Rana, Anup; Gomes, Leandro Cid; Rodrigues, Joao S.; Yacout, Dalia M. M.; Arrou-Vignod, Hugo; Sjolander, Johan; Vedin, Nathalie Proos; El Bakouri, Ouissam; Stensjo, Karin; Lindblad, Peter; Andersson, Leena; Sundberg, Cecilia; Berglund, Mathias; Lindberg, Pia; Ottosson, HenrikAbstract
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.Published in
Green Chemistry2022, volume: 24, number: 24, pages: 9602-9619
Publisher: ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
Authors' information
Rana, Anup
Uppsala University
Gomes, Leandro Cid
Uppsala University
Rodrigues, Joao S.
Uppsala University
Yacout, Dalia M. M. (Abdelfattah, Dalia)
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Energy and Technology
Arrou-Vignod, Hugo
Uppsala University
Sjolander, Johan
Uppsala University
Vedin, Nathalie Proos
Uppsala University
El Bakouri, Ouissam
Uppsala University
Stensjo, Karin
Uppsala University
Lindblad, Peter
Uppsala University
Andersson, Leena
RISE Research Institutes of Sweden
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Energy and Technology
Berglund, Mathias
RISE Research Institutes of Sweden
Lindberg, Pia
Uppsala University
Ottosson, Henrik
Uppsala University
UKÄ Subject classification
Chemical Process Engineering
Publication Identifiers
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d2gc03272d
URI (permanent link to this page)
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/120384