Finding a Better
Way to Make Biodiesel
June 26, 2006
Source: Clean Edge News
They're only 250
billionths of a meter in diameter. But fill them with the right
chemistry and Iowa State scientists say the tiny nanospheres they've
developed could revolutionize how biodiesel is produced.
The researchers are after a new, high-tech catalyst that takes some of
the energy, labor and toxic chemicals out of biodiesel production.
They've come up with a technology that works in the laboratory. And now
they're working with the West Central Cooperative in Ralston to test
their discoveries on a larger scale. They're also working to establish a
company that would move the new technology into biorefineries.
The Iowa State research team is led by Victor Lin, an associate
professor of chemistry. The team also includes George Kraus and John
Verkade, both University Professors of chemistry at Iowa State. The
researchers are part of Iowa State's Center for Catalysis.
Their project is being supported by a $1.8 million, three-year grant
from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, a $120,000, two-year grant from
the U.S. Department of Energy and a $140,000 grant from the Grow Iowa
Values Fund.
"This is a project that's definitely relevant to the state's economy,"
Lin said. "I thought as a scientist I could contribute something to the
state."
Current biodiesel production technology reacts soy oil with methanol
using toxic, corrosive and flammable sodium methoxide as a catalyst.
Getting biodiesel out of the chemical mixture requires acid
neutralization, water washes and separation steps. It's a tedious
process that dissolves the catalysts so they can't be used again, Lin
said.
So Lin and his research team started looking for technologies that would
create an easier, more efficient and more economical process. They were
also hoping to find technologies that would effectively make biodiesel
out of raw materials such as used restaurant oils and animal fats –
materials that are much cheaper than soy oil, but also contain free
fatty acids that can't be converted to biodiesel by current production
methods.
Lin has developed a nanotechnology that accurately controls the
production of tiny, uniformly shaped silica particles. Running all the
way through the particles are honeycombs of relatively large channels
that can be filled with a catalyst that reacts with soybean oil to
create biodiesel. The particles can also be loaded with chemical
gatekeepers that encourage the soybean oil to enter the channels where
chemical reactions take place. The results include faster conversion to
biodiesel, a catalyst that can be recycled and elimination of the wash
step in the production process.
Lin's particles can also be used as a catalyst to efficiently convert
animal fats into biodiesel by creating a mixed oxide catalyst that has
both acidic and basic catalytic sites. Acidic catalysts on the particle
can convert the free fatty acids to biodiesel while basic catalysts can
convert the oils into fuel.
And the particles themselves are environmentally safe because they are
made of calcium and sand.
"We're excited about this and so is West Central," Lin said. "This
serves as an example of how nanotechnology can be useful for advancing
an industry that's not that high-tech. And this allows our students from
the Midwest – some of them from farms – to learn a new kind of
technology that doesn't take them away from home."
Larry Breeding, the general manager of biodiesel operations for the West
Central Cooperative, said the technology shows promise for improving the
efficiency of biodiesel production. But he said it still needs to be
tested at larger and larger scales to see if the economic benefits are
there. Tests also need to prove if the technology works in
continuous-flow production rather than batch-by-batch production.
"This research is a real boon to us," Breeding said. "We don't have a
research campus. So we have to rely on academia and we've leaned on the
people at Iowa State very heavily for a lot of this work."
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