Component Of Asphalt Eyed As New Fuel Source
The pavement material that cars drive on may wind up in their fuel tanks as scientists seek ways of transforming asphaltenes — the main component of asphalt — into an abundant new source of fuel, according to the cover story in the current issue of Chemical & Engineering News, ACS’ weekly newsmagazine.
C&EN senior editor Celia Henry Arnaud notes that rich supplies of asphaltene exist in Canada, Mexico, and Venezuela. But converting this heavy, sticky material into something other than “blacktop” remains a challenge. Sometimes derided as “the cholesterol of petroleum,” asphaltenes are difficult to extract from deposits and clog refinery pipes, the article notes.
Scientists, however, are using newly crafted analytical techniques to probe the molecular structure of asphaltenes in the quest for better ways of producing and refining asphaltene-rich fuel sources in the future.
- Sustainable Operating Systems/The Post Petrol Paradigm
- Sustainable Operating Systems/The Post Petrol Paradigm

One Comment
Andy M
September 28th, 2009
at 2:01pm
Uhhh, “asphaltenes” come from crude oil.