A sweet way to replace petroleum?A variety of products now manufactured from petroleum could one day be made instead from simple sugar molecules, thanks to a new chemical process. Compounds derived from petroleum are the chemical building blocks of many consumer goods consumer goods Any tangible commodity purchased by households to satisfy their wants and needs. Consumer goods may be durable or nondurable. Durable goods (e.g., autos, furniture, and appliances) have a significant life span, often defined as three years or more, and , including plastics and pharmaceuticals. With the price of crude oil skyrocketing, researchers are on the lookout for in search of; looking for. See also: Lookout alternatives, says Z. Conrad Zhang, a chemist at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory The Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) is one of nine United States Department of Energy (DOE) multiprogram national laboratories. The laboratory PNNL is located in Richland, Washington, and operates a marine research facility in Sequim, Washington. in Richland, Wash. One promising candidate is a molecule called 5-hydroxymethylfurfural or HMF HMF abbr. Her (or His) Majesty's Forces . Chemists typically make HMF from fructose fructose (frŭk`tōs), levulose (lĕv`yəlōs'), or fruit sugar, simple sugar found in honey and in the fruit and other parts of plants. in a strongly acidic, water-based solution. Under such conditions, much of the HMF that forms quickly breaks down, and it's difficult to purify what remains intact. Now, Zhang and his colleagues have developed a technique to produce HMF efficiently, which they describe in the June 15 Science. Instead of stirring the ingredients into water, the researchers dissolved them in an ionic liquid, which consists solely of positively and negatively charged Adj. 1. negatively charged - having a negative charge; "electrons are negative" electronegative, negative charged - of a particle or body or system; having a net amount of positive or negative electric charge; "charged particles"; "a charged battery" ions (SN: 9/8/01, p. 156). Adding various catalysts to the acidfree mix quickened the reaction and stabilized the HMF that was produced. The team's best results occurred when it cooked the fructose mixtures at 80[degrees]C for about 3 hours and used chromium chloride as a catalyst. Under those conditions, up to 83 percent of the fructose was converted into HMF, says Zhang. Preliminary tests suggest that a variation of this process could generate HMF from the cellulose in wood and plant stems, says Zhang. Cellulose molecules are chains of fructose and glucose.--S.P. |
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