Transcript Slide 1
Biodiesel Production via Continuous Supercritical Catalytic Packed Bed Reactor
Oregon State University ◦ School of Chemical, Biological and Environmental Engineering
Team Members: Staci Van Norman, Mike Knapp, Malachi Bunn
Project Sponsors: Dr. Nick Wannenmacher, Dr. Brian Reed, Kevin Harris M.S., M.B.A.
Chevron, Beaver Biodiesel, Willamette Biodiesel, Encore Fuels, ONAMI, MBI
Gas Chromatography
Data Analysis
Little or no modification to existing diesel
engines
In the supercritical state the miscibility (how well
components mix) is greatly increased
Reduced emissions such as (CO2, CO, etc.),
non-toxic and degrades 4 TIMES faster than
petrodiesel
Water content in the oil does not effect the conversion
Glycerol purity (> 96%) can be sold for cosmetic and
and has been shown to assist with the formation of
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pharmaceutical
uses
esters. Additionally, glycerol is more soluble in water
which makes product separation easier9
Gas Chromatography (GC)
with a Flame Ionization
Detector (FID), used to detect
electric current (Response) of
eluting compounds, for
determining sample
composition
2
Oxygen content in biodiesel (BD) improves
combustion efficiency and also has a flash point
of 302°F (150°C) compared to petrodiesel of
147°F (64°C)
Product quality is more consistent than batch methods
Free fatty acids (FFA) are converted to esters
Project Objectives
Establish optimal operating conditions for different feedstock oils to obtain the highest
production at the lowest operating cost (low energy input and separation cost)
What is Biodiesel?
Monoalkyl esters of long chain fatty acids derived from renewable lipid feedstocks3
Produced from renewable vegetable oils, waste cooking oil, animal fat and non-edible oils
How is Biodiesel Produced?
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Two internal standards used
for mass determination
Camelina Oil Chromatogram Overlay
Response [mV]
Reduces dependency on imported petroleum
Our Production Technology –
Continuous, Supercritical, Catalytic Packed Bed Transesterification
Why Biodiesel?1
Certified standards used for
ethyl and methyl ester
calibrations
Determine feasibility of unrefined natural oil feedstocks obtained from national and
local suppliers
Reaction of one large multi-ester molecule with
three alcohols to make three esters and one
glycerol4
Time [min]
Develop kinetic model of transesterification reaction under supercritical
heterogeneous catalytic continuous flow conditions
Operating Parameters
Molar Ester Percent
Reactor temperature (290°C & 305°C)
Conduct economic comparison to classical batch processes
Alcohol to oil molar ratio (20:1 & 30:1)
Molar amount of esters present in product stream ignoring
unreacted feedstock alcohol - this excess alcohol is recycled back
into the alcohol feedstock storage tank
Residence time within reactor based on standard
flow conditions (4, 6 & 8 minutes)
Catalyst Material
Homogeneous (i.e. liquid-liquid phase)
Heterogeneous (i.e. solid-liquid phase)
Catalyst
Tin catalyst applied to 50-250 μm 304 stainless steel plasma powder (OSU Patented Technologies)
Pressure of reactor (constant at 2500 psi)
Ester Percent of Reactor Products
Limitations of Current BD Technology
Homogeneous catalysts require refined oils
Reaction can take an hour or longer
Free fatty acid content over 0.5 wt% and water bearing oils cause
soap and froth formation which reduces productivity and makes
separation of products difficult1
Pretreatment required to prevent soap formation
before combining with liquid catalyst and alcohol
Domestic Biodiesel Production
305°C – 20:1
4 minute
6 minute
8 minute
304 Stainless Powder
Treated 304 Stainless Powder
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Analysis completed on classical batch method using
soybean, methanol and base catalysts
$2.15/gal
Kinetic Model
For a 60 million gallon production facility, when
considering only raw material, utility and fuels costs
from an economic analysis completed at Iowa State
University6
Canola
Feedstock Oils
Castor
Food Grade Canola
Yellow Grease
Need for a shift to more efficient, cost effective
reaction methods to meet increasing demand
Commercial Yellow Grease
Unrefined Jatropha
Expeller Pressed (MT) Camelina
Industrial Castor
Expeller Pressed (OR) Soybean
Jatropha
Variability of Crude Oil Price
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As of June 8th, 2009 crude oil
was $68.7/bbl8
Additional Motivation
for Biofuels
Decrease dependence on
petroleum based fuels
Build local economies
Dollar/barrel ($/bbl)
At the beginning of this project
(March 2009) crude oil was $45/bbl
Camelina
Expeller Pressed (OR) Camelina
Soy Bean
Second Order Rate at 305˚C
Slope = 2k(1/Xe -1)CA0
Reaction rate kinetics change
from first to second order with
increasing reactor
temperature for canola oil
Soybean oil continues to be
first order with increasing
temperature
Economic Comparison
Experimental Setup
Analysis completed on raw material costs for ethanol
and soybean oil including transportation costs
$68.7/bbl
This estimation does not include capital costs which
would decrease with increasing production output
$0.98-$0.99/gal
Conclusions
Minimal variation in % molar ester content using different oils
No significant benefit to increasing temperature or reactant
ratio within the tested operating
conditions
Reduce distribution costs
High Pressure
Pumps
References available upon request.
Reaction kinetics modeling of
canola and soy bean oil
conversion data
First Order Rate at 290˚C
Slope = k/Xe
Electrical & Control
Housing
Reactor & Preheater
Housing
Cooling Loop & Pressure
Regulation
Initial economic analysis comparison, to classical batch
production, demonstrates about
50% reduction in material
costs per gallon produced using
this technology
High FFA content changes the reaction kinetics, making
overall ester production faster
Technology is ready for pilot scale production, including
implementation of separation techniques