Biodiesel production Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Biodiesel recipeLike a recipe for making a cake, a biodiesel recipe specifies quantity of every ingredient required, and the steps for combining and processing them to make biodiesel fuel.
The most common recipe uses waste vegetable oil (WVO), alcohol (methanol or ethanol) and sodium hydroxide (caustic soda), to produce biodiesel and glycerol. To produce 1 tonne of biodiesel:
- One needs 1 t of biolipids (animal or vegetable oil) and 0,1 t of methanol.
- One receives 0,1 t of glycerol.
- Preparation: cleaning/heating biolipid (i.e. WVO). With wet oil, you will obtain soap with the biodiesel, the conversion index from vegetable oil to biodiesel will be smaller and you will obtain an excess of triglycerides.
- Titration of WVO sample. Optimal pH for Biodiesel is 7 (neutral), the same as distilled water (and most tap water). Some fat has a high level of free fatty acids which require an acid esterification (to obtain an pH lower than 3) before the alkaline transesterification.
- Mixing the bioalcohol (methanol or ethanol) and catalyst (sodium hydroxide) in exact amounts, to produce methoxide
- Combining at 50ºC methoxide with the biolipids.
- Separation:
- Of biodiesel and glycerol (by decantation, centrifugation...).
- Removing of alcohol (by distillation).
- Biodiesel purification: separation from the biodiesel of the wastes (catalyst and soap): washing and drying the biodiesel.
- Disposing of the wastes.
- Base catalyzed transesterification of the biolipid.
- Direct acid catalyzed transesterification of the biolipid.
- Conversion of the biolipid to its fatty acids and then to biodiesel.
Transestrification is crucial for producing biodiesel from biolipids. The transesterification process is the reaction of a triglyceride (fat/oil) with an bioalcohol to form esters and glycerol.
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Biodiesel processor machines, need the vegetable oil to have some specific properties:
The reaction may be shown
CH2COOR1
Since we are dealing with nature, the alkyl group on the triglycerides are probably different, so it would actually be more like
CH2OC=OR1
Oil preparation
Reaction
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CHCOOR1 + 3 CH3OH → (CH2OH)2CH-OH + 3 CH3COO-R1
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CH2COOR1
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CHOC=OR2 + 3 CH3OH → (CH2OH)2CH-OH + CH3COO-R1 + CH3COO-R2 + CH3OC=O-R1
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CH2COOR3
R1, R2, R3 : Alkyl group.
During the esterification process, the triglyceride is reacted with alcohol in the presence of a catalyst, usually a strong alkaline (NaOH, KOH or sodium silicate). The main reason for doing a titration to produce biodiesel, is to find out how much alkaline is needed to insure a complete transesterfication. 6.25 g / l NaOH produces a very usable fuel. One uses about 6 g NaOH when the WVO is light in colour and about 7 g NaOH when it is dark in colour.
The alcohol reacts with the fatty acids to form the mono-alkyl ester (or biodiesel) and crude glycerol. The reaction between the biolipid (fat or oil) and the alcohol is a reversible reaction so the alcohol must be added in excess to drive the reaction towards the right and ensure complete conversion.
You want to mix the base (KOH,NaOH) with the alcohol to make a reactive anion
KOH + ROH → RO- + H2O
KOH and NaOH are strong bases, so the reaction equilibrium is far to the right.
The ROH needs to be very dry. Any water in the alcohol will reduce the amount of RO- that gets formed.
The RO- is a reactive guy, so you must be very careful with this stuff. Often in chemistry alcohols are mixed with KOH to make a "base bath" for cleaning glass. It actually dissolves the surface of the glass, so be really careful with this stuff.
Once the RO- group is formed, it is added to the triglyceride. The Sn2 reaction that follows replaces the alkyl group on the tricglyceride in a series of reactions.
The carbon on the ester of the triglyceride has a slight positive charge, and the oxygens have a slight negative charge, most of which is located on the oxygen in the double bond. This charge is what attracts the RO- to the reaction site
This yields a transition state that has a pair of electrons from the C=O bond now located on the oxygen that was in the C=O bond.
These electrons then fall back to the carbon and push off the glycol forming the ester.
Then 2 more RO's react via this mechanism at the other 2 C=O groups. This type of reaction has several limiting factors. RO- has to fit in the space where there is a slight positive charge on the C=O. So MeO- works well because it is small. As the R on RO- gets bigger, reaction rates decrease. This effect is called steric hinderance. That is why methanol and ethanol are typically used.
There are several competing reactions, so care must be taken to ensure the desired reaction pathway occurs. Most methods do this by using an excess of RO-.
The acid catalysed method is a slight variance, but is also affected by steric hinderance.
This is an Article on Biodiesel production. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Biodiesel production Base catalysed Mechanism
R1
backside attack |
RO- -----------------> C=O
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O-CH2-CH-CH2-O-C=O
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O-C=O R3
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R2
R1
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RO-C-O- (pair of electrons)
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O-CH2-CH-CH2-O-C=O
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O-C=O R3
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R2
R1
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RO-C=O
+
-O-CH2-CH-CH2-O-C=O
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O-C=O R3
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R2
Process
The reaction mix is kept just above the boiling point of the alcohol (around 70°C) to speed up the reaction though some systems recommend the reaction take place at room temperature. Recommended reaction time varies from 1 to 8 hours. Excess alcohol is normally used to ensure total conversion of the fat or oil to its esters.See also
