The research, co-authored by Prof Debasish Das and
Dr Krishna Kalyani Sahoo, Department of Biosciences and Bioengineering, IIT
Guwahati, has been published in Fuel, a journal by Elsevier. Methane, a greenhouse gas that is 27-30
times more potent than carbon dioxide, is a significant contributor to global
warming. While turning methane and carbon dioxide into liquid fuels can reduce
emissions and provide renewable energy, existing chemical methods are
energy-intensive, expensive, and produce toxic by-products, limiting their
scalability.
The research team developed a fully biological process that uses
Methylosinus trichosporium, a type of methanotrophic bacteria, to convert
methane and carbon dioxide into bio-methanol under mild operating conditions. Unlike traditional chemical methods, this process
eliminates the need for expensive catalysts, avoids toxic by-products, and
operates in a more energy-efficient manner, mentioned the institute.
The innovative two-stage process involves: Capturing
methane to generate bacteria-based biomass and utilising the biomass to convert
carbon dioxide into methanol.
The team further optimised the process using advanced engineering
techniques to improve gas solubility, significantly enhancing methanol yields.
The research addresses two pressing global challenges:
the harmful environmental impact of greenhouse gases and the depletion of
fossil fuel reserves.