Biofuels Basics, 3 PDH
(Biofuels Basics )
COURSE HIGHLIGHTS
Biofuels include ethanol from grain or sugar, diesel fuel from soybeans, ethanol from cellulosic feedstock, and several other feedstock/fuel combinations. This course provides information about the Biomass Research and Development Board's seven point Action Plan for development of biofuels. There is also information about and a comparison among the wide variety of possible biofuels, with greatest emphasis on those either already in commercial production or close to commercial production capability. There's detail about the production of ethanol from cellulosic feedstocks, which still needs some developmental work, but has great near term potential. Finally there is information about switchgrass, which has great potential as a crop to be used as a cellulosic feedstock for ethanol production.
This course is intended primarily for energy, civil, mechanical, chemical, environmental, and industrial engineers. Someone completing this course will gain knowledge about basic biofuels technologies.
In this course, you need to review the Training Material file, which is made up of four NREL and DOE documents: "National Biofuels Action Plan," "From Biomass to Biofuels,NREL Leads the Way" "Research Advances Cellulosic Ethanol, NREL Leads the Way," and "Biofuels from Switchgrass: Greener Energy Pastures."
Upon completing your review of the course material, you need to take a multiple choice quiz consisting of fifteen (15) questions to earn 3 PDH credits. The quiz will be based on the entire document. 80% correct is required for a quiz passing grade.
Learning Objectives
At the conclusion of this course, the student will learn:
- The basic concepts of biofuel technology
- The production processes involved in converting biomass to biofuel
- The comparative features of nine different feedstock/fuel combinations
- The plan of action for the multi-agency R&D board for biofuel development
- Research advances and future goals for producing cellulosic theanol biofuel
- The dynamics involved in developing switchgrass biomass into biofuel
Course Author Profile: Harlan Bengson, Ph, PE