Old news from my  blog, but important news for "media hyped on  biuofuels"
  Chemical engineer Randy Cortright and his colleagues at  Virent Energy Systems of Madison, Wisc., and researchers led by NSF-supported  chemical engineer James Dumesic of the University of Wisconsin at Madison are  now announcing that sugars and carbohydrates can be processed like petroleum  into the full suite of products that drive the fuel, pharmaceutical and chemical  industries.
 The physical properties of Virent's Biogasoline product spontaneously separate from water. This requires very little energy for processing compared with the energy-intensive process of distillation required for ethanol purification.
The process Virent discovered in early 2006, and  announced at the Growing the Bioeconomy conference sponsored by Iowa State  University on Sept. 9, 2008, is the subject of patent applications published  last week.
 According to Dumesic, a key feature of the approach is  that between the sugar or starch starter materials and the hydrocarbon end  products, the chemicals go through an intermediate stage as an organic liquid  composed of functional compounds.
 "The intermediate compounds retain 95 percent of the  energy of the biomass but only about 40 percent of the mass, and can be upgraded  into different types of transportation fuels, such as gasoline, jet and diesel  fuels," said Dumesic. "Importantly, the formation of this functional  intermediate oil does not require the need for an external source of hydrogen,"  he added, since hydrogen comes from the slurry itself.
 As part of a suite of second generation biofuel  alternatives, green gasoline approaches like aqueous phase reforming are  generating interest across the academic and industrial communities because they  yield a product that is compatible with existing infrastructure, closer than  many other alternatives in their net energy yield, and most importantly, can be  crafted from plants grown in marginal soils, like switchgrass, or from  agricultural waste.
 While several years of further development will be  needed to refine the process and scale it for production, the promise of  gasoline and other petrochemicals from renewable plants has led to broad  industrial interest.
 Read full at  scientificblogging.com