Lean eating machines: These slender bacteria, called Q microbes, can dissolve cellulose into sugars and convert the sugar into ethanol, all in one step. When the microbes find themselves in high concentrations of cellulose, they eat voraciously and leave only ethanol behind. A scientist whose lab discovered the bacterium theorizes that it outcompetes other species by being able to eat a wide variety of plant components very quickly, rather than by more efficiently using all the energy in the plants, which is why it excretes higher-energy waste (ethanol).
Qteros

Business

Cheaper Cellulosic Ethanol

Qteros thinks its microbe could cut production costs.

  • Wednesday, December 10, 2008
  • By Jennifer Kho

Startup Qteros, based in Hadley, MA, and formerly known as SunEthanol, thinks that it holds the key to finally making cellulosic ethanol cost-effective. It's a bacterium called the Q microbe, or, more properly, Clostridium phytofermentans, and the company claims that it can eliminate the costly enzymes normally used to turn cellulose into ethanol.

Cellulosic ethanol is usually made with enzymes to break down the fibrous cell walls of cellulose into simple sugars, then with yeast to ferment the sugars into ethanol. Qteros expects to simplify the two steps into one and dramatically reduce the cost of making cellulosic ethanol using its bacteria, which naturally eats cellulose and produces ethanol as waste.

The enzymatic degradation of cellulose in conventional processes accounts for at least 20 percent of the overall cost of making cellulosic ethanol, says Qteros CEO William Frey, who was the business director for DuPont's biofuels program before joining the startup in June. "Certainly enzymes have been the Achilles' heel of [cellulosic ethanol]," he says.

Qteros says that its bacteria can convert many different types of feedstock, including starch, corn cobs, sugarcane bagasse, and woody biomass, directly into ethanol. And while most organisms that can break down cellulose--including common yeast--can only digest six-carbon sugars, the Q can digest five-carbon sugars too, meaning that it can produce more ethanol from the same material, Frey says.

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In November, Qteros announced that it had raised $25 million in its second round of funding from Venrock, Battery Ventures, oil giant BP, billionaire financier George Soros's Soros Fund Management, Camros Capital, and Long River Ventures. Combined with a $3.6 million from Series A funding and several grants, the company has raised more than $30 million.

The company plans to use its new cash to build a pilot plant, which it expects to begin operating next year. Qteros also plans to build demonstration plants in 2010 and hopes to have commercial plants using its technology up and running by 2011. Qteros doesn't intend to build factories itself but will license its technology--including the microbe and the processing--to customers that want to produce ethanol.

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VCRAGAIN

37 Comments

  • 1162 Days Ago
  • 12/10/2008

ONE ORGANISM DOES IT ALL

PLEASE - let the ittle guy have the organism - we all want that gadget in our garage where we dump all the waste and let the drum fill with ethanol - bingo - run our cars from home produced garbage -
what chance of that I wonder - but at least they are all working on it - still I am wondering if they wil sell bottles of the stuff to us too (:>)

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