Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
207936 Fuel 2008 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Non-catalytic biodiesel production technologies from oils/fats in plants and animals have been developed in our laboratory employing supercritical methanol. Due to conditions in high temperature and high pressure of the supercritical fluid, thermal stability of fatty acid methyl esters and actual biodiesel prepared from various plant oils was studied in supercritical methanol over a range of its condition between 270 °C/17 MPa and 380 °C/56 MPa. In addition, the effect of thermal degradation on cold flow properties was studied. As a result, it was found that all fatty acid methyl esters including poly-unsaturated ones were stable at 270 °C/17 MPa, but at 350 °C/43 MPa, they were partly decomposed to reduce the yield with isomerization from cis-type to trans-type. These behaviors were also observed for actual biodiesel prepared from linseed oil, safflower oil, which are high in poly-unsaturated fatty acids. Cold flow properties of actual biodiesel, however, remained almost unchanged after supercritical methanol exposure at 270 °C/17 MPa and 350 °C/43 MPa. For the latter condition, however, poly-unsaturated fatty acids were sacrificed to be decomposed and reduced in yield. From these results, it was clarified that reaction temperature in supercritical methanol process should be lower than 300 °C, preferably 270 °C with a supercritical pressure higher than 8.09 MPa, in terms of thermal stabilization for high-quality biodiesel production.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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