Biodiesel

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biodiesel
Specific gravity: 0.87 to 0.891
Kinematic viscosity@ 40°C: 3.7 to 5.81
Higher heating value(btu/lb): 16,928 to 17,9961
Sulfur, wt%: 0.0 to 0.00241
Cloud point °C : -11 to 161
Pour point °C: -15 to 131
Iodine number :

60 to 1351

Cetane Number: 46 to 701
Lower heating value (btu/lb): 15,700 to 16,7351
Tropical feedstocks: coconut oil, oil palm, castor beans, jatropha, pongamia pinnata
Temperate feedstocks: rapeseed, soy beans, sunflower seed
Other feedstocks: algae, waste vegetable oil, Halophytes (Saltwater plants)
1:EERE

Biodiesel (also spelled bio-diesel) is diesel fuel produced from plants and plant oils. It is commonly sold blended with diesel derived from petroleum; blends include "B2" (2% biodiesel), "B5" (5% biodiesel), "B10" (10% biodiesel) and "B100" (100% biodiesel).

Contents

Biodiesel production

Biodiesel is made by chemically combining a vegetable oil or animal fat with an alcohol (such as methanol or ethanol) via a process known as transesterification. This produces an alkyl ester of fatty acid, containing an alcohol group attached to a single hydrocarbon chain comparable in length to that of diesel (C10H22 to C15H32)1.

Co-products

  • Glycerin (C3H8O3) (also called glycerol) is the primary co-product of biodiesel production.1
    • Glycerin can be used as soap, as well as in the cosmetic industry and its sale can offset the cost of biodiesel production.1
  • "The “meal” left in the seed after oil has been removed is currently sold as an animal feed."1

Characteristics

  • Due to the wide variety of oils and fats that can be used to produce biodiesel, there is a greater range in the characteristics of biodiesel fuels than for ethanol fuel."1
  • Some oils are shorter or more saturated - characteristics that affect the viscosity and combustibility of the biodiesel.1
  • Biodiesel contains 88–95% as much energy as diesel fuel.1
  • However, biodiesel can also improve diesel lubricity and raise the cetane value, meaning that in many cases diesel has a similar fuel efficiency.1
  • "The alcohol component of biodiesel contains oxygen, which helps to complete the combustion of the fuel, reducing air pollutants such as particulates, carbon monoxide, and hydrocarbons."1
  • Biodiesel contains practically no sulfur, so it can help reduce emissions of sulfur oxides."1

Feedstocks

Biodiesel can be produced from any vegetable oil or animal fat, including waste vegetable oil produced by restaurants. There are also several experimental feedstocks including algae, which can be grown off of various types of waste.

  • In Europe, rapeseed oil is the major feedstock used to make biodiesel, with some sunflower oil also used.1
  • "In the United States, biodiesel has generally been made from soybean oil as more of this is produced domestically than all other sources of fats and oils combined."1
  • In tropical and sub-tropical countries, there are a wider variety of feedstocks being considered including both edible and non-edible oils.

Drawbacks

  • "Biodiesel blends are sensitive to cold weather and may require special anti-freezing precautions, similar to those taken with standard number-2 diesel."1
  • "Long-term storage of biodiesel can be a concern because it may oxidize, although additives can ensure stability."1
  • "Biodiesel acts like a detergent additive, loosening and dissolving sediments in storage tanks and also causing rubber and other components to fail; these concerns are typically minimal at low-level blends of biodiesel, and at higher blend levels problems can be avoided with some attention to the materials used in engine fuel injectors and the overall fuel handling system."1

Biodiesel blend

Policy/issues

Publications

See books, reports, scientific papers, position papers and websites for additional useful resources.

News

  • San Francisco Fleet is All Biodiesel from the New York Times, 14 December 2007, the mayor announced that the city has completed a year-long project to convert its entire vehicle fleet to biodiesel created from midwestern soy oil.

Companies

Organizations

Educational resources/Tutorials

Events

2009

2008

References

1Biofuels for Transportation (draft) (2006, Worldwatch Institute), p.13-14. Used with permission.

Biodiesel edit
Biodiesel production | Biodiesel companies
Biodiesel producers by country | Biodiesel organizations
Biodiesel feedstocks: Currently in use: soybeans | palm oil | coconut oil | rapeseed | sunflower seed | castor beans | jatropha | karanj | jojoba | waste vegetable oil | animal fat
Currently in research and development: algae | halophytes (saltwater plants)
Types of bioenergy edit

Gases: Biopropane | Biogas | Synthetic natural gas | Syngas
Liquids: Biodiesel | Biobutanol | Biogasoline | Biokerosene | Biomass-to-Liquids (BTL) | Dimethyl ether (DME)
ETBE | Ethanol | Methanol | Pure plant oil (PPO) | Pyrolysis oil | Synthetic Natural Gas
Solids: Biomass pellets | Char/Charcoal | Wood


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