Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
203279 Fluid Phase Equilibria 2013 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•SLE of mixtures of ethyl stearate, ethyl laurate and ethyl palmitate was studied.•Binary and ternary systems were studied through differential scanning calorimetry.•The binary system ethyl palmitate + ethyl stearate forms a solid solution.•Binary systems were correlated using the Flory–Huggins model.•Liquidus line of the ternary system was satisfactorily predicted.

Biodiesel is a substitute fuel for petroleum-based diesel obtained from vegetables, formed by fatty acid methyl or ethyl esters produced by transesterification reaction between fats or oils and alcohols. An experimental study of solid–liquid equilibrium of ternary mixtures of ethyl esters commonly present in biodiesel (ethyl laurate, ethyl palmitate and ethyl stearate) was carried out using differential scanning calorimetry. Experimental results show that no eutectic composition is observed for ternary systems, although binary systems formed by ethyl laurate and ethyl palmitate as well as ethyl laurate and ethyl stearate present eutectic points at ≥90% (m/m) of ethyl laurate, indicating solid phase immiscibility. The system ethyl palmitate and ethyl stearate forms solid solutions for all compositions (miscible system). The experimental results were modeled using the Flory–Huggins equation for liquid phase and, when applicable, solid phase non-ideality, with good agreement.

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