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Agency Seeks to Develop Military Aviation Biofuel
Blackanthem
Military News,
ARLINGTON, Va., July 24, 2006
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is soliciting energy
alternatives and fuel efficiency efforts in a bid to reduce the
military's reliance on traditional fuel for aircraft.
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The Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency (DARPA) has released a solicitation calling for the
exploration of energy alternatives and fuel efficiency efforts in a bid
to reduce the military's reliance on traditional fuel for aircraft.
DARPA is looking for processes that will efficiently produce alternative
non-petroleum based military jet fuel from agriculture or aquaculture
crops.
Current commercial processes do not produce alternative fuels that meet
the higher energy density and wide operating temperature range necessary
for military aviation uses.
The program is currently outlined in a recently issued broad agency
announcement and is known as The BioFuels program.
The goal of the BioFuels program is to develop an affordable alternative
production process that will achieve a 60 percent or greater conversion
efficiency, by energy content, of crop oil to military aviation fuel
(JP-8) and elucidate a path to 90 percent conversions.
DARPA seeks processes that use limited sources of external energy, that
are adaptable to a range or blend of feedstock crop oils, and that
produce process by-products that have ancillary manufacturing or
industrial value.
Current biodiesel fuels are 25 percent lower in energy density than JP-8
and exhibit unacceptable cold-flow features at the lower extreme of the
required JP-8 operating temperature range (minus 50 degrees Fahrenheit).
It is anticipated that the key technology developments needed to obtain
the program goal will result from a cross-disciplinary approach spanning
the fields of process chemistry and engineering, materials engineering,
biotechnology, and propulsion system engineering.
The program is an exploratory evaluation of processing crop oils into a
JP-8 surrogate biofuel, resulting in a laboratory-scale production to be
tested at a Department of Defense test facility.
Successful proposers are expected to deliver a minimum of 100 liters of
JP-8 surrogate biofuel for initial government laboratory testing.
DARPA will be hosting a Proposers Day, July 25, 2006, in Denver Colo.,
as a venue to provide information about the BioFuels program, promote
discussion on the topic, address questions from potential proposers, and
provide a forum for potential proposers to present their capabilities
for teaming opportunities.
Details on the Proposers Day are available through the BioFuels website.
Organizations interested in proposing approaches for DARPA's BioFuels
program should obtain the solicitation and the proposer information
pamphlet for further details. Both are available on the BioFuels
website.
By Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Release
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