Cargando…

Biodiesel Processing Using Sodium and Potassium Geopolymer Powders as Heterogeneous Catalysts

This work investigates the catalytic activity of geopolymers produced using two different alkali components (sodium or potassium) and four treatment temperatures (110 to 700 °C) for the methyl transesterification of soybean oil. The geopolymers were prepared with metakaolin as an aluminosilicate sou...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Botti, Renata F., Innocentini, Murilo D.M., Faleiros, Thais A., Mello, Murilo F., Flumignan, Danilo L., Santos, Leticia K., Franchin, Giorgia, Colombo, Paolo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7356640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32575547
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25122839
_version_ 1783558536297447424
author Botti, Renata F.
Innocentini, Murilo D.M.
Faleiros, Thais A.
Mello, Murilo F.
Flumignan, Danilo L.
Santos, Leticia K.
Franchin, Giorgia
Colombo, Paolo
author_facet Botti, Renata F.
Innocentini, Murilo D.M.
Faleiros, Thais A.
Mello, Murilo F.
Flumignan, Danilo L.
Santos, Leticia K.
Franchin, Giorgia
Colombo, Paolo
author_sort Botti, Renata F.
collection PubMed
description This work investigates the catalytic activity of geopolymers produced using two different alkali components (sodium or potassium) and four treatment temperatures (110 to 700 °C) for the methyl transesterification of soybean oil. The geopolymers were prepared with metakaolin as an aluminosilicate source and alkaline activating solutions containing either sodium or potassium in the same molar oxide proportions. The potassium-based formulation displayed a higher specific surface area and lower average pore size (28.64–62.54 m²/g; 9 nm) than the sodium formulation (6.34–32.62 m²/g; 17 nm). The reduction in specific surface area (SSA) after the heat treatment was more severe for the sodium formulation due to the higher thermal shrinkage. The catalytic activity of the geopolymer powders was compared under the same reactional conditions (70–75 °C, 150% methanol excess, 4 h reaction) and same weight amounts (3% to oil). The differences in performance were attributed to the influences of sodium and potassium on the geopolymerization process and to the accessibility of the reactants to the catalytic sites. The Na-based geopolymers performed better, with FAME contents in the biodiesel phase of 85.1% and 89.9% for samples treated at 500 and 300 °C, respectively. These results are competitive in comparison with most heterogeneous base catalysts reported in the literature, considering the very mild conditions of temperature, excess methanol and catalyst amount and the short time spent in reactions.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7356640
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-73566402020-07-22 Biodiesel Processing Using Sodium and Potassium Geopolymer Powders as Heterogeneous Catalysts Botti, Renata F. Innocentini, Murilo D.M. Faleiros, Thais A. Mello, Murilo F. Flumignan, Danilo L. Santos, Leticia K. Franchin, Giorgia Colombo, Paolo Molecules Article This work investigates the catalytic activity of geopolymers produced using two different alkali components (sodium or potassium) and four treatment temperatures (110 to 700 °C) for the methyl transesterification of soybean oil. The geopolymers were prepared with metakaolin as an aluminosilicate source and alkaline activating solutions containing either sodium or potassium in the same molar oxide proportions. The potassium-based formulation displayed a higher specific surface area and lower average pore size (28.64–62.54 m²/g; 9 nm) than the sodium formulation (6.34–32.62 m²/g; 17 nm). The reduction in specific surface area (SSA) after the heat treatment was more severe for the sodium formulation due to the higher thermal shrinkage. The catalytic activity of the geopolymer powders was compared under the same reactional conditions (70–75 °C, 150% methanol excess, 4 h reaction) and same weight amounts (3% to oil). The differences in performance were attributed to the influences of sodium and potassium on the geopolymerization process and to the accessibility of the reactants to the catalytic sites. The Na-based geopolymers performed better, with FAME contents in the biodiesel phase of 85.1% and 89.9% for samples treated at 500 and 300 °C, respectively. These results are competitive in comparison with most heterogeneous base catalysts reported in the literature, considering the very mild conditions of temperature, excess methanol and catalyst amount and the short time spent in reactions. MDPI 2020-06-19 /pmc/articles/PMC7356640/ /pubmed/32575547 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25122839 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Botti, Renata F.
Innocentini, Murilo D.M.
Faleiros, Thais A.
Mello, Murilo F.
Flumignan, Danilo L.
Santos, Leticia K.
Franchin, Giorgia
Colombo, Paolo
Biodiesel Processing Using Sodium and Potassium Geopolymer Powders as Heterogeneous Catalysts
title Biodiesel Processing Using Sodium and Potassium Geopolymer Powders as Heterogeneous Catalysts
title_full Biodiesel Processing Using Sodium and Potassium Geopolymer Powders as Heterogeneous Catalysts
title_fullStr Biodiesel Processing Using Sodium and Potassium Geopolymer Powders as Heterogeneous Catalysts
title_full_unstemmed Biodiesel Processing Using Sodium and Potassium Geopolymer Powders as Heterogeneous Catalysts
title_short Biodiesel Processing Using Sodium and Potassium Geopolymer Powders as Heterogeneous Catalysts
title_sort biodiesel processing using sodium and potassium geopolymer powders as heterogeneous catalysts
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7356640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32575547
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25122839
work_keys_str_mv AT bottirenataf biodieselprocessingusingsodiumandpotassiumgeopolymerpowdersasheterogeneouscatalysts
AT innocentinimurilodm biodieselprocessingusingsodiumandpotassiumgeopolymerpowdersasheterogeneouscatalysts
AT faleirosthaisa biodieselprocessingusingsodiumandpotassiumgeopolymerpowdersasheterogeneouscatalysts
AT mellomurilof biodieselprocessingusingsodiumandpotassiumgeopolymerpowdersasheterogeneouscatalysts
AT flumignandanilol biodieselprocessingusingsodiumandpotassiumgeopolymerpowdersasheterogeneouscatalysts
AT santosleticiak biodieselprocessingusingsodiumandpotassiumgeopolymerpowdersasheterogeneouscatalysts
AT franchingiorgia biodieselprocessingusingsodiumandpotassiumgeopolymerpowdersasheterogeneouscatalysts
AT colombopaolo biodieselprocessingusingsodiumandpotassiumgeopolymerpowdersasheterogeneouscatalysts