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Ethanol, Schmethanol Everyone seems to think that ethanol is a good way to make cars greener. However , everyone is wrong. 1 Sometimes you do things simply because you know how to do. People have known how to make ethanol since the dawn of civilisation, if not before. Take some sugary liquid. Add yeast. Wait. They have also known for a thousand years how to get that ethanol out of the formerly sugary liquid and into a more or less pure form. You heat it up, catch the vapour that emanates, and cool that vapour down until it liquefies. 2 The result burns. And when Henry Ford was experimenting with car engines a century ago, he tried ethanol out as a fuel. But he rejected it—and for good reason. The amount of heat you get from burning a litre of ethanol is a third less than that from a litre of petrol. What is more, it absorbs water from the atmosphere. Unless it is mixed with some other fuel, such as petrol, the result is corrosion that can wreck an engine' s seals in a couple of years. So why is ethanol suddenly back in fashion? That is the question many biotechnologists in America have recently asked themselves. 3 The obvious answer is that , being derived from plants, ethanol is “green”. The carbon dioxide produced by burning it was recently in the atmosphere. Putting that C0 2 back into the air can therefore have no adverse effect on the climate. But although that is true, the real reason ethanol has become the preferred green substitute for petrol is that people know how to make it 一 that, and the subsidies now available to Americans maize farmers to produce the necessary feedstock. Yet such things do not stop ethanol from being a lousy fuel. To solve that, the biotechnologists argue, you need to make a better fuel that is equally green. This is what they are trying to do! Designer petrol 4 The first step on the road has been butanol. This is also a type of alcohol that can be made by fermenting sugar (though the fermentation is done by a species of bacterium rather than by yeast), and it has some advantages over ethanol. It has more carbon atoms in its molecules (four, instead of two), which means more energy per litre—though it is still only 85% as rich as petrol. It also has a lower tendency to absorb water from the atmosphere. 5 A joint venture between DuPont, a large American chemical company, and BP, a British energy firm, has worked out how to industrialise the process of making biobutanol, as the chemical is commonly known when it is the product of fermentation. Although BP plans to start selling the stuff in the next few weeks (mixed with petrol, to start with), the truth is that butanol is not all that much better than ethanol. The interesting activity is elsewhere. 6 One route might be to go for yet-larger (and thus energy-richer) alcohol molecules. Any simple alcohol is composed of a number of carbon and hydrogen atoms (like a hydrocarbon such as petrol) together with a single oxygen atom. In practice, this game of topping up the carbon content to make a better fuel stops with octanol (eight carbon atoms) as anything bigger tends to freeze at temperatures that might be encountered in winter. But living things are familiar with alcohols. Their enzymes are geared up to cope with them. This makes the bio technologists' task that much easier. 7 The idea of engineering enzymes to make octanol was what first brought Codexis, a small biotechnology firm based in Redwood City, California, into the field. Codexis' s technology works with pharmaceutical precision—indeed, one of its main commercial products is the enzyme system for making the chemical precursor® to Lipitor, a cholesterol- lowering drug that is marketed by Pfizer. Codexis controls most of the important patents for what is known as molecular evolution. This designs enzymes in the way that normal evolution designs organisms. It creates lots of variations on a theme, throws away the ones it does not want, and shuffles the rest in a process akin to sex. It then repeats the process on the survivors until something useful emerges—though , unlike natural evolution, there is a bit of intelligent design in the process, too. The result, according to Codexis' s boss, Alan Shaw, is enzymes that can perform chemical transformations unknown in nature. 8 Dr. Shaw, however, is no longer so interested in octanol as a biofuel. Like two other, nearby firms, he is now focusing Codexis' s attention on molecules even more chemically similar to petrol. The twist that Codexis brings is that unlike petrol, of which each batch from the refinery is chemically different from the others (because the crude oil from which it is derived is an arbitrary mixture of hydrocarbon molecules), biopetrol could be turned out exactly the same, again and again, and thus designed to have the optimal mixture of properties required of a motor fuel. 9 Exactly which molecules Codexis is most interested in these days, Dr. Shaw is not yet willing to say. But Amyris Biotechnologies, which is also based in California, in Emeryville, and which also started by dabbling in drugs (in its case an antimalarial medicine called artemisinin ), is slightly more forthcoming. Under the guidance of its founder Jay Keasling, it has been working on a type of isoprenoid (a class of chemicals that include rubber). 10 Unlike Codexis, which deals in purified enzymes, Amyris employs a technique called synthetic biology, which turns living organisms into chemical reactors® by assembling novel biochemical pathways within them. Dr. Keasling and his colleagues scour the world for suitable enzymes, tweak them to make them work better, then sew the genes for the tweaked enzymes into a bacterium that thus turns out the desired product. That was how they produced artemisinin, which is also an isoprenoid. 11 Isoprenoids have the advantage that, like alcohols, they are part of the natural biochemistry of many organisms. Enzymes to handle them are thus easy to come by. They have the additional advantage that some are pure hydrocarbons, like petrol. With a little judicious searching, Amyris thinks it has come up with isoprenoids that have the right characteristics to substitute for petrol. 12 The third Californian firm in the business, LS9 of San Carlos, is cutting to the chase. If petrol is what is wanted, petrol is what will be delivered. And diesel, too, although in this case the product is actually biodiesel, which is in some ways superior to the petroleum-based stuff. 13 LS9 also uses synthetic biology, but it has concentrated on controlling the pathways that make fatty acids. Like alcohols, fatty acids are molecules that have lots of hydrogen and carbon atoms, and a small amount of oxygen (in their case two oxygen atoms, rather than one). Plant oils consist of fatty acids combined with glycerol —and these fatty acids (for example, those from palm oil) are the main raw material for the biodiesel already sold today. 14 LS9 has used its technology to turn microbes into factories for fatty acids containing between 8 and 20 carbon atoms —the optimal number for biodiesel. But it also plans to make what it calls “biocrude”. In this case the fatty acids would have 18 〜 30 carbon atoms, and the final stage of the synthetic pathway would clip off the oxygen atoms to create pure hydrocarbons. This biocrude could be fed directly into existing oil refineries, without any need to modify them. 15 These firms, however, have one other competitor. His name is Craig Venter. Dr. Venter, a veteran of biotechnological scraps ranging from gene patenting to the private human-genome project, has been interested in bioenergy for a long time. To start with, it was hydrogen that caught his eye, then methane —both of which are natural bacterial products. But now that eye is shifting towards liquid fuels. His company, modestly named Synthetic Genomics (and based, unlike the others, on the east side of America, in Rockville, Maryland), is reluctant to discuss details, but Dr. Venter, too, is taken with the pharmaceutical analogy. Indeed, he goes as far as to posit the idea of clinical trials for biofuels—presumably pitting one against another, perhaps with petroleum-based products acting as the control, and without the drivers knowing which was which. 16 Whether biofuels will ever be competitive with fossil fuels remains to be seen. That will depend on a mixture of economics and politics. But the political rush to back ethanol, just because it is green and people have heard of it, is a mistake. Let a thousand flowers bloom, and see which one wins Dr. Venter' s Grand Prix®. (1,453 words) New Words ethanol /'eGansul/ n . 乙醇,酒精 emanate /'emaneit/ v. 流出,发出,发散 corrosion /k3r3U3an/ n. 腐蚀,侵蚀; (铁 ) 锈蚀 wreck /rek/ v. 毁坏,毁灭 subsidy /’SAbsidi/ n. 补贴,津贴,补助金 feedstock /'fiidstok/ n. 给料 ( 指供送入机器或加工厂的原 lousy /'lauzi/ adj. 料) 糟糕的;极坏的,极不适的;劣等的 butanol /bjutanaul/ n . 丁醇 ferment /foment/ v . ( 使 ) 发酵;(使 ) 激动,骚动 bacterium /bask'tiariam/ n . 细菌 molecule /'molikjuil/ n . 分子 octanol /'oktanol/ n . pharmaceutical /.faimasjuitikal/ adj. 制药的;配药的 cholesterol /kalestarol/ n. 胆固醇 shuffle /'JaH/ v. 拖着脚步走 r 洗(纸牌 ); 混合,弄混 akin /akin/ adj. 相似的,类似的 refinery /ri'fainari/ n. 精炼厂,炼油厂 optimal /Optimal/ adj. 最佳的,最优的 dabble /'daebl/ v. 涉猎,浅尝,涉足 antimalarial /.aentimalearial/ n. & adj. 抗症药;抗症的 forthcoming /fD:0kAmig/ adj. 即将到来的;坦率的,乐于合作的 isoprenoid /.aisau'prenoid/ n. 类异戌二烯 synthetic /sin'Getik/ adj. 合成的,人造的 scour /'skaua/ v . 走遍(某地 ) 搜寻 ( 人或物) tweak /twi:k/ v . 拧;调节,调整 judicious /d 3 udijas/ adj. 明智的,贤明的 diesel /diizal/ n. 柴油 glycerol /'glisarol/ n . 甘油,丙三醇 methane /'mi:9ein/ n. 甲烷,沼气 posit /pDzit/ v. 假定,设想,假设 Expressions adverse effect 反作用,副作用,坏的影响,不良反应 top up 加满 gear up 使做好行动准备
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参考答案:
举一反三
【单选题】物流的场所价值是由______ 引起的。
A.
商品和物料在供应商和需求商之间的空间距离
B.
商品市场的空间差
C.
商品和物流需集中和分散
D.
商品和物料的流动
【单选题】下列选项中关于要约说法错误的是()。
A.
内容具体确定
B.
表明经受要约人承诺,要约人即受该意思表示的约束
C.
要约具有法律约束力
D.
招标公告属于要约
【单选题】出镜记者担任的最主要专业任务是什么?
A.
摄影创作
B.
文稿撰写
C.
技术保障
D.
新闻事件或特定现场的出镜报道、评论分析
【单选题】下列选项中,关于承诺效力的表述,正确的是( )。
A.
承诺在有效期限内,受要约人可以撤回和撤销承诺
B.
默示和不作为在特定情况下可以构成有效的承诺
C.
要约人于收到迟到承诺的撤回通知时,及时通知承诺人承诺撤回迟到的事实,则发生撤回承诺的法律效力
D.
承诺一经作出,并送达要约人,合同即告成立,要约人不得加以拒绝
【单选题】( )是脂类消化的主要场所
A.
小肠上段
B.
小肠下段
C.
D.
肝脏
【单选题】什么是单元空间?
A.
由多种空间形式合成的空间,是大空间和小空间的复合体。
B.
被包围起来的空间。是单一的、具体的,不对其他物体和空间产生影响。
C.
在使用上是其他功能性空间的过渡,起着集散人流、协调空间组合的作用。
【单选题】下列选项中,关于承诺条件的表述,不正确的是( )。
A.
承诺只能向要约人作出
B.
承诺必须在承诺期限内发出
C.
承诺必须由要约人作出
D.
承诺的内容应当与要约的内容一致
【单选题】下列选项中,关于承诺的是
A.
招标公告
B.
招标文件
C.
投标
D.
中标通知书
【单选题】依照《合同法》的规定,下列关于承诺的表述中,正确的选项为( )
A.
承诺期限自要约人作出要约开始计算
B.
承诺不可以撤回
C.
承诺可以撤销,撤销承诺的通知应在承诺通知到达要约人之前或与承诺通知同时到达要约人
D.
受要约人超过承诺期限发出承诺的,除要约人及时通知受要约人该承诺有效的以外,为新要约
【单选题】造成患者重度残疾、器官组织损伤导致严重功能障碍的医疗事故的级别是
A.
五级
B.
四级
C.
三级
D.
二级
E.
一级
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