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Kinetics of Biodiesel Production from Microalgae Using Microbubble Interfacial Technology

As an alternative to fossil fuels, biodiesel can be a source of clean and environmentally friendly energy source. However, its commercial application is limited by expensive feedstock and the slow nature of the pretreatment step-acid catalysis. The conventional approach to carry out this reaction us...

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Autores principales: Javed, Fahed, Saif-ul-Allah, Muhammad Waqas, Ahmed, Faisal, Rashid, Naim, Hussain, Arif, Zimmerman, William B., Rehman, Fahad
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9774469/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36550945
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering9120739
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author Javed, Fahed
Saif-ul-Allah, Muhammad Waqas
Ahmed, Faisal
Rashid, Naim
Hussain, Arif
Zimmerman, William B.
Rehman, Fahad
author_facet Javed, Fahed
Saif-ul-Allah, Muhammad Waqas
Ahmed, Faisal
Rashid, Naim
Hussain, Arif
Zimmerman, William B.
Rehman, Fahad
author_sort Javed, Fahed
collection PubMed
description As an alternative to fossil fuels, biodiesel can be a source of clean and environmentally friendly energy source. However, its commercial application is limited by expensive feedstock and the slow nature of the pretreatment step-acid catalysis. The conventional approach to carry out this reaction uses stirred tank reactors. Recently, the lab-scale experiments using microbubble mediated mass transfer technology have demonstrated its potential use at commercial scale. However, all the studies conducted so far have been at a lab scale~100 mL of feedstock. To analyze the feasibility of microbubble technology, a larger pilot scale study is required. In this context, a kinetic study of microbubble technology at an intermediate scale is conducted (3 L of oil). Owing to the target for industrial application of the process, a commercial feedstock (Spirulina), microalgae oil (MO) and a commercial catalyst para-toluene sulfonic acid (PTSA) are used. Experiments to characterize the kinetics space (response surface, RSM) required for up-scaling are designed to develop a robust model. The model is compared with that developed by the gated recurrent unit (GRU) method. The maximum biodiesel conversion of 99.45 ± 1.3% is achieved by using these conditions: the molar ratio of MO to MeOH of 1:23.73 ratio, time of 60 min, and a catalyst loading of 3.3 wt% MO with an MO volume of 3 L. Furthermore, predicted models of RSM and GRU show proper fits to the experimental result. It was found that GRU produced a more accurate and robust model with correlation coefficient R(2) = 0.9999 and root-mean-squared error (RSME) = 0.0515 in comparison with RSM model with R(2) = 0.9844 and RMSE = 3.0832, respectively. Although RSM and GRU are fully empirical representations, they can be used for reactor up-scaling horizontally with microbubbles if the liquid layer height is held constant while the microbubble injection replicates along the floor of the reactor vessel—maintaining the tessellation pattern of the smaller vessel. This scaling approach maintains the local mixing profile, which is the major uncontrolled variable in conventional stirred tank reactor up-scaling.
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spelling pubmed-97744692022-12-23 Kinetics of Biodiesel Production from Microalgae Using Microbubble Interfacial Technology Javed, Fahed Saif-ul-Allah, Muhammad Waqas Ahmed, Faisal Rashid, Naim Hussain, Arif Zimmerman, William B. Rehman, Fahad Bioengineering (Basel) Article As an alternative to fossil fuels, biodiesel can be a source of clean and environmentally friendly energy source. However, its commercial application is limited by expensive feedstock and the slow nature of the pretreatment step-acid catalysis. The conventional approach to carry out this reaction uses stirred tank reactors. Recently, the lab-scale experiments using microbubble mediated mass transfer technology have demonstrated its potential use at commercial scale. However, all the studies conducted so far have been at a lab scale~100 mL of feedstock. To analyze the feasibility of microbubble technology, a larger pilot scale study is required. In this context, a kinetic study of microbubble technology at an intermediate scale is conducted (3 L of oil). Owing to the target for industrial application of the process, a commercial feedstock (Spirulina), microalgae oil (MO) and a commercial catalyst para-toluene sulfonic acid (PTSA) are used. Experiments to characterize the kinetics space (response surface, RSM) required for up-scaling are designed to develop a robust model. The model is compared with that developed by the gated recurrent unit (GRU) method. The maximum biodiesel conversion of 99.45 ± 1.3% is achieved by using these conditions: the molar ratio of MO to MeOH of 1:23.73 ratio, time of 60 min, and a catalyst loading of 3.3 wt% MO with an MO volume of 3 L. Furthermore, predicted models of RSM and GRU show proper fits to the experimental result. It was found that GRU produced a more accurate and robust model with correlation coefficient R(2) = 0.9999 and root-mean-squared error (RSME) = 0.0515 in comparison with RSM model with R(2) = 0.9844 and RMSE = 3.0832, respectively. Although RSM and GRU are fully empirical representations, they can be used for reactor up-scaling horizontally with microbubbles if the liquid layer height is held constant while the microbubble injection replicates along the floor of the reactor vessel—maintaining the tessellation pattern of the smaller vessel. This scaling approach maintains the local mixing profile, which is the major uncontrolled variable in conventional stirred tank reactor up-scaling. MDPI 2022-11-29 /pmc/articles/PMC9774469/ /pubmed/36550945 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering9120739 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Javed, Fahed
Saif-ul-Allah, Muhammad Waqas
Ahmed, Faisal
Rashid, Naim
Hussain, Arif
Zimmerman, William B.
Rehman, Fahad
Kinetics of Biodiesel Production from Microalgae Using Microbubble Interfacial Technology
title Kinetics of Biodiesel Production from Microalgae Using Microbubble Interfacial Technology
title_full Kinetics of Biodiesel Production from Microalgae Using Microbubble Interfacial Technology
title_fullStr Kinetics of Biodiesel Production from Microalgae Using Microbubble Interfacial Technology
title_full_unstemmed Kinetics of Biodiesel Production from Microalgae Using Microbubble Interfacial Technology
title_short Kinetics of Biodiesel Production from Microalgae Using Microbubble Interfacial Technology
title_sort kinetics of biodiesel production from microalgae using microbubble interfacial technology
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9774469/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36550945
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering9120739
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