TechCrunch News 02月05日
E-fuels startup will make diamonds before powering jet planes
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Stephen Beaton在911事件后加入空军,对化石燃料替代方案产生了浓厚兴趣。退役后,他创立了Circularity Fuels,致力于开发液态燃料。但Beaton意识到燃料作为初创产品利润微薄,于是公司选择从高利润的实验室培育钻石入手,因为生产钻石需要高纯度甲烷。Circularity Fuels通过结合氢气和二氧化碳制造甲烷,其独特之处在于高效催化剂和一体化反应器,能以更低的能源消耗生产高纯度甲烷,甚至在当前氢气价格下也能盈利。公司的目标是降低电子燃料的价格,从而在市场上与化石燃料竞争,并计划通过模块化反应器在需要的地方生产燃料,减少运输成本和温室气体排放。

💎Circularity Fuels最初选择实验室培育钻石市场,是因为生产钻石需要纯度极高的甲烷,而这种甲烷的售价远高于天然气,这为公司提供了一个高利润的切入点。

🔥Circularity Fuels的核心技术在于其独特的反应器和催化剂。该反应器能够一体化地捕获二氧化碳并生产甲烷,同时利用反应产生的废热为碳捕获设备提供动力,从而显著降低了能源消耗,比其他二氧化碳转化为燃料的途径节能40%。

💰目前,Circularity Fuels已获得包括ARPA-E、加州能源委员会、国家科学基金会和斯坦福TomKat可持续能源中心在内的机构提供的490万美元的资助和奖励,为其技术研发和商业化提供了资金支持。

September 11 left a lasting impression on Stephen Beaton, and like many others of his generation, he joined the military.

But at the U.S. Air Force academy, his journey took a bit of a turn. There, his chemistry studies deepened his interest in liquid fuels. “As a product of September 11, seeing the spike in oil prices, I always thought, ‘how could we replace fossil fuels?’ I thought that it was important for national security.” 

Beaton’s passion took him to Oxford for a PhD then back to the U.S. where he had a string of posts with the U.S. Air Force, including leading research projects, monitoring the quality of the branch’s fossil fuels, and overseeing R&D investments in energy.

After leaving the military, Beaton wanted to found a company focused on, you guessed it, creating liquid fuels. “I’ve always been obsessed with fuels.” But there was one problem: “Fuel is a terrible first product,” he said.

“Fuel is a commodity. It’s very cheap. The fossil fuel industry has had 150 years to really optimize for scale and cost,” Beaton added. “Your first product should be one that is like a high-margin luxury product — the Tesla Roadster approach. But ideally, it can’t be too far off of the path to making the fuel.”

Beaton says his startup, Circularity Fuels, has found that market: lab-grown diamonds. Diamonds are pure carbon, and the chemical process used to make them requires methane that’s almost entirely free of impurities.

“That methane typically sells anywhere from 100 to 300 times the price of natural gas,” he said, which is between $40,000 and $80,000 a ton.

Circularity makes methane by combining hydrogen with carbon from CO2. That idea isn’t novel, but the way the company goes about it is. Plenty of companies are attempting to transform captured carbon dioxide back into fuel, but the process is often too expensive to challenge fossil fuels on price. Beaton admits that Circularity can’t compete with most fossil fuels today, but if the company can scale its unique reactor, he thinks it has a chance in the near future.

The startup’s secret is a special catalyst that’s more selective, meaning it makes more of the target molecule, methane, and less of the unwanted stuff. And the special reactor it designed can capture carbon and make methane without needing separate vessels. The reactor can heat up quickly so the catalyst hits its peak efficiency faster, and it reuses waste heat from the reaction that creates methane to power the carbon capture equipment. 

Altogether, Circularity’s process uses 40% less energy than competing CO2-to-fuel pathways, Beaton said.

Because the catalyst is so selective, Circularity can make 99.9999% pure methane at pilot scale cheaper than from fossil fuels, he said. “Even at the current hydrogen prices of $5,000 to $7,000 a ton, we’re profitable,” he said.

“We envision taking those same concepts and scaling them up for methane, natural gas, synthetic natural gas, as well as other products,” Beaton said. The company wants to drive the price of e-fuels down to the point where they can steal market share from fossil fuels.

The reactor is designed to be modular, allowing methane and e-fuel to be made wherever it’s needed, saving on transportation costs and cutting greenhouse gas emissions from leaky infrastructure. That’s part of what drove the DCVCs investment, partner Zack Bogue told TechCrunch. “The current way of extracting and transporting natural gas is so leaky that we’re actually better off burning coal,” he said.

Circularity was recently announced as an ARPA-E awardee, and the company is currently going through final contract negotiations. The company was incubated at DCVC, where Beaton is an entrepreneur-in-residence, and the firm provided pre-seed funding. Between ARPA-E and grants from the California Energy Commission, the National Science Foundation, and Stanford TomKat Center for Sustainable Energy, the company has received $4.9 million in grants and awards.

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Circularity Fuels 液态燃料 实验室钻石 二氧化碳转化 可持续能源
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