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Transesterification of Soybean Oil to Biodiesel by Using Heterogeneous Basic Catalysts

429

Citations

24

References

2006

Year

TLDR

Biodiesel production has risen sharply due to its lower environmental impact compared to petroleum diesel. The study explores using MgO and calcined hydrotalcites as catalysts for soybean oil transesterification with methanol. The authors evaluate MgO and calcined hydrotalcite catalysts for soybean oil transesterification with methanol. Experimental results show that catalyst basicity and structural texture—determined by precursor and preparation—affect transesterification, with super‑basic sites enabling low‑temperature conversion and all catalysts remaining moisture‑resistant.

Abstract

Biodiesel production has increased greatly in recent years, because of the less-detrimental effects of this fuel on the environment, compared to a conventional diesel obtained from petroleum. This work investigates the possibility of using MgO and calcined hydrotalcites as catalysts for the transesterification of soybean oil with methanol. The achieved experimental data show a correlation not only with the catalysts basicity, but also with its structural texture. However, the structural texture of the examined catalysts is dependent on both the precursor and the preparation method. At least four different types of basic sites have been individuated on the surface of MgO and calcined hydrotalcite catalysts. The strongest basic sites (super-basic) promote the transesterification reaction also at very low temperature (100 °C), while the basic sites of medium strength require higher temperatures to promote the same reaction. Ultimately, all the tested catalysts are resistant to the presence of moisture in the reaction environment.

References

YearCitations

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