1 / 22

BTC PTEC Biodiesel Workshop

BTC PTEC Biodiesel Workshop. August 7 – 8, 2006 Session 3 – Feed stock and product quality. Agenda for third session. Feed stock types Measurement of feed stock quality Biodiesel specifications Measurement of product quality. Feedstocks for biodiesel. Vegetable oil Soybean Rapeseed

oshin
Télécharger la présentation

BTC PTEC Biodiesel Workshop

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BTC PTEC Biodiesel Workshop August 7 – 8, 2006 Session 3 – Feed stock and product quality

  2. Agenda for third session • Feed stock types • Measurement of feed stock quality • Biodiesel specifications • Measurement of product quality

  3. Feedstocks for biodiesel • Vegetable oil • Soybean • Rapeseed • Palm • Animal fats (lower cost) • Rendering plants • Spent oils (lowest cost, so far) • Yellow and grey grease

  4. Comparison of feedstocks • Vegetable oil • Unrefined (high phospholipid content) un-degummed oils have separation problems in the process • Refined (better product) • Animal fats • Lower cost • Higher concentrations of saturated FA • Biodiesel products may have higher freezing points • Higher cetane numbers

  5. Comparison of feedstocks • Spent oils • Trap grease (odor, moisture and color problems for this low cost feedstock) • Brown grease (FFA > 15%) • Yellow grease (FFA < 15%) • Cheaper

  6. Vegetable oils • US • Soybean oil (0.4 T oil/ha, 20% yield from seeds) • Canola and mustard oil (40% yield from seeds) • Europe • Rapeseed oil (0.5 T/ha, 40% yield from seeds) • Sunflower oil (0.5 T/ha) • Tropics • Palm oil (4 T/ha)

  7. Feedstock preparation • Removal of contaminants • Sediment < 2% • Moisture < 0.5 – 1% • Free fatty acids < 2 – 15% • Phosphatide and sulfur <20 ppm

  8. Chemical quality • Alcohols • Dry • Free of contaminants that may go into ester phase • Catalysts • Dry

  9. Fuel quality issues • Free fatty acids • Moisture (hard to keep out) • Contaminants • Unreacted triacyl glycerols, alcohol • Unseparated glycerine • Mono and diglycerides • Storage properties • Measure acid and viscosity to follow quality

  10. Fuel contaminant problems • Fuel filter plugging • From mono and di glycerides • Engine deposits • Fuel deterioration • Affected by presence of air, heat, metals • Biodiesel will absorb some water upon storage (1500 ppm) • May pick up material from storage tanks

  11. Fuel standards • US ASTM D6751 • Mostly same as for diesel fuel, except for • Acid number, glycerine • Higher limit on water • Europe EN14214 (engine), EN14213 (heating) • Diesel standard is ASTM 975 • State standards for cloud point

  12. ASTM D6751 Biodiesel Standard

  13. Comparison of diesel to biodiesel ASTM limits

  14. Fuel related properties of diesel and methyl esters

  15. Analytical tests • Gas chromatography (GC) • Ester identification and quantification • Titration • FFA measurement • Iodine test • Flashpoint (flammabilit) cup method • Water and sediment (centrifuge for volume) • Low water solubility in biodiesel (15 ppm) • Distillation (upper/lower limits for 90%) • Too low, may have to high a flashpoint • Too high, tendency of fuel to deposit on cylinder walls

  16. Analytical tests • Viscosity (falling ball or capillary method) • Ash (muffle furnace method) • Cloud point (temperature at which fuel first starts to crystallize), regional and seasonal • Carbon residue (pyrolysis test) • Glycerol (Gas Chromatograph) • Acid number (potentiometric titration) • Phosphorus (Inductively Coupled Plasma Atomic Emission Spectroscopy) • Sulfur by Ultraviolet Fluorescence

  17. Fuel properties • Cetane number • Measure of ignition quality of fuel (autoignition property) • Hexadecane (cetane) has a cetane number of 100 • Biodiesel minimum of 47 (ASTM D6751) • Uses an engine (expensive)

  18. Analysis and costs • Full specification analysis • about $1300/sample • $1100/sample for seven consecutive samples (Magellan Midstream Partners Laboratory Service) • Several analytical companies are equipped for analysis • PerkinElmer offers on-line training courses

  19. Fuel properties • Cold weather properties • Cloud point • Temperature at which fuel starts to crystallize • Pour point • Temperature at which fuel cannot be freely poured • Cold filter plugging point (ASTM D6371) • Lowest filtration temperature

  20. Fuel properties • Storage properties (oxidation) • Iodine value • Indication of unsaturation of FA • Indication of tendency to polymerize • European limits of 120 (engine) and 130 (heating) • Rancimat test • Can improve with additives (same as for diesel fuel) or modification

  21. National Biodiesel Accreditation Program • Voluntary program for producers and markets to produce a standard biodiesel called BQ-9000 • Includes ASTM 6751 standard and quality systems standards for the practices of: • Storage • Sampling and testing • Shipping and distribution • Fuels management • Eight accredited producers in the US • Market a BQ-9000 manual ($125)

  22. Improvement of low temperature properties • Additives (polymers) • Winterization (cooling and filtration) • Results in loss of material and reduces CN • Branched esters • Isopropyl ester has mp 6 - 7 deg below propyl • Higher cost

More Related