화학공학소재연구정보센터
Applied Energy, Vol.88, No.11, 3625-3631, 2011
Purification of biodiesel from used cooking oils
In Europe, methyl esters cannot be classified as biodiesel until the EN 14214 Standard specifications are fulfilled. The aim of this paper is to examine the efficiency of removing several impurities in biodiesel from used cooking oils by means of three basic operations under conditions that have been kept as close to commercial operating practice as possible: (a) adsorption (magnesium silicate and bentonite); (b) liquid-liquid extraction (distilled water, tap water, glycerol); and (c) ion exchange (cation resin). The results show that all the purification methods can remove soap, methanol and glycerol effectively, while none had an effect on density, kinematic viscosity, FAME content or glyceride content. However, some of them have shown an influence on FFA and water content. The liquid-liquid extraction with glycerol at 15 wt.% and a 2-step contact proved to be the most suitable. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.