Industrial eggshell wastes as the heterogeneous catalysts for microwave-assisted biodiesel production
13. Climate action
0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering
02 engineering and technology
01 natural sciences
7. Clean energy
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
DOI:
10.1016/j.cattod.2011.12.024
Publication Date:
2012-02-05T10:19:58Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
Abstract Active biodiesel production catalysts were derived from waste eggshells by simple calcination in air. The physicochemical properties of the activated catalysts were characterized by XRD, N 2 sorption, CO 2 -TPD, TGA–DTG, XRF, and SEM, while the catalytic activity was tested in producing biodiesel via transesterification on palm oil with methanol under microwave conditions. The effect of microwave power, reaction time, methanol-to-oil ratio, and catalyst loading was investigated. The experimental results revealed that the catalysts exhibited a high content of CaO (99.2 wt%) with a high density of strong base sites. The catalytic testing demonstrated a remarkable enhancement for biodiesel production using microwaves compared to conventional heating. The maximum yield of fatty acid methyl esters reached 96.7% under the optimal condition of reaction time of 4 min with 900 W microwave power, methanol-to-oil ratio of 18:1, and catalyst loading of 15%. The results indicated that the CaO catalysts derived from eggshells showed good reusability and had high potential to be used as biodiesel production catalysts under microwave-assisted transesterification of palm oil.
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