Researchers have claimed to have run a car on B-20 biodiesel derived from marine micro algae.
Under the New Millennium India Technology Leadership project, a regular diesel vehicle, Tavera, under full load condition, was successfully test driven on B-20 biodiesel (20 per cent biodiesel blend) on July 10, a top official of the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research said on Thursday.
MULTI project was initiated last year jointly by CSIR and the Ministry of Earth Sciences, along with researchers from nine institutions, including CSMCRI, IIT-Kharagpur, IICT Hyderabad, NIOT Chennai and NIO Goa.
The biodiesel prepared from mats of microalgae were found growing naturally in the west coast of India by the Bhavnagar-based Central Salt Marine and Chemical Research Institute.
The mileage derived from the test drive was 12.4 km, which is better than the normal average per litre of 10-11
km of the regular vehicles run on diesel, the official said.
"The aim of the project is to develop a scalable viable process for production of bio-fuel from marine algae.
In the first step, road worthiness of B-20 marine micro algae biodiesel under full load conditions has been proven," said NMITLI coordinator Dr Vibha Malhotra.
"The next step would be to run vehicle under full load conditions on B-100 (neat biodiesel) marine micro algae biodiesel and to look at its economic viability," she said.
"Although the demonstration aimed at proving road worthiness of micro-algal biodiesel, it remains to be seen whether such mat-forming marine micro algae can be cultivated inland or induced to grow rapidly and on large scale in the sea itself," said CSMCRI Director Dr Pushpito Ghosh.
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