Feature Story | 1-Aug-2024

Caring about catalysis: UVA researchers on quest for sustainable aviation fuel

University of Virginia School of Engineering and Applied Science

University of Virginia researchers are part of the team experimenting with a chemical process that could make a U.S. Department of Energy $1 billion “Grand Challenge” a reality: jets that regularly fly long distances, such as across the Pacific and Atlantic oceans, using only sustainable aviation fuel.

Robert J. Davis, a chemical engineer on faculty at the UVA School of Engineering and Applied Science and Colby Whitcomb, a postdoctoral research associate in the Davis lab, are trying to make a plant-based hydrocarbon fuel for jets using catalysis, a way to more efficiently produce a desired chemical product — in this case the conversion of bioethanol to aviation fuel.

“This is a massive effort involving national labs and universities from all over the country in four bioenergy research centers.

Biofuels are compatible with modern engines and have the potential to cut greenhouse gas emission by 85%, according to the Energy Department.

Davis and Whitcomb are working with the multi-institutional team converting plant matter at the Center for Bioenergy Innovation, led by Oak Ridge National Lab and supported by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Biological and Environmental Research. The targeted biomass sources are poplar trees and switchgrass because they proliferate quickly and require few resources to make them grow. Moreover, they contain large amounts of fermentable sugars that can be used to produce bioethanol. 

The UVA researchers work closely with a group at Oak Ridge that is developing a catalyst for the conversion of bioethanol into short chain hydrocarbons, and researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, to use acidic zeolite catalysts in the transformation of those short hydrocarbons to longer molecules suitable for aviation fuel.

Davis is a world-renowned expert in reaction engineering who has authored more than 190 publications. He chaired the University of Virginia Department of Chemical Engineering from 2002 to 2011. He has received numerous research and teaching awards, including the Wilhelm Award of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. His efforts have advanced research on new, renewable, environmentally friendly and economical energy sources. 

The DOE and UVA Grand Challenges 

The Sustainable Aviation Fuel Grand Challenge is an Energy Department collaboration with the Department of Transportation and the U.S. Department of Agriculture to achieve a minimum 50% reduction in life cycle greenhouse gas emissions compared to conventional fuel.

The federal government also is shooting to meet 100% of aviation fuel demand with biofuel by 2050.

“This is a massive effort involving national labs and universities from all over the country in four bioenergy research centers” Davis said. “These centers bring together a diverse collection of scientists and engineers to approach the many issues involved with efficiently growing, collecting, processing and refining biomass into biofuels”

The Energy Department’s Grand Challenge shares a lot in common with the University’s own Grand Challenge Research Investments, established by the UVA Vice President for Research’s Office to promote researched solutions to the world’s most urgent problems, including climate change. The Davis Lab Group is part of the University’s broader Catalysis Team. 

About UVA Engineering: As part of the top-ranked, comprehensive University of Virginia, UVA Engineering is one of the nation’s oldest and most respected engineering schools. Our mission is to make the world a better place by creating and disseminating knowledge and by preparing future engineering leaders. Outstanding students and faculty from around the world choose UVA Engineering because of our growing and internationally recognized education and research programs. UVA is the No. 1 public engineering school in the country for the percentage of women graduates, among schools with at least 75 degree earners; among the top engineering schools in the United States for the four-year graduation rate of undergraduate students; and among the top-growing public engineering schools in the country for the rate of Ph.D. enrollment growth. Our research program has grown by 95% since 2016. Learn more at engineering.virginia.edu.

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