Keith,

   Thanks a mint! I work for the American Cotton growers at Cotton 
Incorporated. We do research and promotion on U.S. cotton and cotton 
products of all kinds. This could really help us out. We are always 
looking for a new angle to utilize and implement cotton at any level. 
I'm sure you have seen our familiar cotton logo and seen our 
commercials if you live in the U.S.
Thanks again,
Sam Dabbs


--- In biofuel@egroups.com, Keith Addison <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >Does anyone know if and how you can make ethanol from cellulose, in
> >particularly cotton and cotton waste products such as gin waste and
> >textile mill waste?
> >Thanks,
> >Sam
> 
> 
> Hi Sam
> 
> See the Files section at the biofuels list website (members only 
> access), "sawdust.html - Fuel From Sawdust", at:
> http://www.egroups.com/group/biofuel
> 
> Or sign in first with your email address and password at:
> http://www.egroups.com/mygroups
> 
> 
> Also the Alcohol Fuel Manual in the Files section has a chapter on 
> Cellulose Conversion. Click on "manual - Alcohol Fuel Manual", the 
> chapters are inside the folder.
> 
> The Manual for the Home and Farm Production of Alcohol Fuel
> by S.W. Mathewson
> Chapter 8
> Processing Steps Specific To Cellulose Materials - Cellulose 
Conversion
> 
> 
> 
> Arkenol Inc.
> http://www.arkenol.com
> A chemical company that is looking to the sugar barrel instead of 
the 
> oil barrel for fuel supplies. Arkenol is a pioneer in processing 
> cellulose biomas into ethanol: agricultural wastes, straw, leaves, 
> grass clippings, sawdust or old newspapers.
> (From http://journeytoforever.org/ethanol_link.html)
> 
> 
> 
>  From list message archives:
> 
> From: "DAVID REID" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Date: Tue, 30 May 2000 17:14:43 +1200
> Reply-To: biofuel@egroups.com
> Subject: Re: [biofuel] Fuel From Sawdust
> 
> Keith, Steve, et al,
>                                  The Forest Research Institute here 
in NZ at
> Rotorua ran quite an involved  series of trials using sawdust for 
ethanol
> production during the 80s and I believe were at that time at the 
forefront
> of this use. I have the file somewhere here as I was looking into 
the use of
> this byproduct with one of the newly developed G.E. yeasts that can 
ferment
> the xylose (cellulose) fraction as well as the carbohydrate 
portion. Voila!
> At least 30% and up to 40% more ethanol without a major byproduct 
waste you
> need to get rid of. Had forgotten about it for the last few months
> B.r.,  David Reid
> 
> 
> From: Robert Warren <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Date: Tue, 30 May 2000 10:37:25 -0400 (EDT)
> Reply-To: biofuel@egroups.com
> Subject: [biofuel] Fuel From Sawdust
> 
> Keith, Steve, et al
> This reminds me, I have visited NREL in Golden,
> Colorado many times, and one time I got to visit
> the lab where they were working on this very issue
> of convertering sawdust through acid hydrolisis
> and fermentation. They easily had over one million
> dollars in automated stainless steel tanks,
> piping, electronic controls, and such, and they
> were successful. They have some extensive reports
> on this subject if you care to browse through
> there library. Their stuff is on the technical
> side, but they have done specific work on
> identifing specific microbes which work well. Go
> to www.nrel.gov or
> to http://www.afdc.nrel.gov/


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