Print page

Home » Valves » Valves » Catalysts streamline biodiesel process

Catalysts streamline biodiesel process

ChemicalProcessing.com
04/24/2007

Researchers at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tenn., have developed a series of solid acid nanocatalysts that promise to avoid some post-reaction steps in the production of biodiesel. The catalytic transesterification of vegetable oils or animal fats is central to the production of biodiesel, which is attracting increasing interest (see "Chemical industry sees green").

Conventional processes yield a biodiesel that contains some catalyst, which could corrode engines. Removal of the catalyst adds several steps such as neutralization and washing to the production process, consumes chemicals, water and energy, and invariably leads to some loss of biodiesel.

The new sulfonated mesoporous carbon-based heterogeneous catalysts can be fixed inside a column, retained and reused, notes Oak Ridge’s Chengdu Liang. They boast pore sizes of five to 10 nanometers to provide improved catalytic performance, and an average surface area of 400 m2/g, which is about 20 times higher than that of other heterogeneous catalysts, he adds.

More content on this topic:

Solutions Centers

The Optimized Plant

The Optimized Plant

Sponsored by Honeywell

Honeywell can help sustain the life of your assets and maximize the operational performance of your plant or mill.

Solutions for the Chemicals Industry

Solutions for the Chemicals Industry

Sponsored by SAP

Measure your performance against your peers and discover which functional areas you can improve. Includes manufacturing, supply chain, R&D, regulatory compliance (ie REACH), and customer management.

Business Performance

Business Performance

Sponsored by Honeywell

Improve performance and increase profitability with integrated, comprehensive solutions that protect your people, process and assets, while reducing costs and improving productivity.

Marketplace (Sponsored)