WO2005030911A2 - Process for producing biodiesel - Google Patents

Process for producing biodiesel Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2005030911A2
WO2005030911A2 PCT/GB2003/004212 GB0304212W WO2005030911A2 WO 2005030911 A2 WO2005030911 A2 WO 2005030911A2 GB 0304212 W GB0304212 W GB 0304212W WO 2005030911 A2 WO2005030911 A2 WO 2005030911A2
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
process according
seed
alcohol
ethyl alcohol
seeds
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Application number
PCT/GB2003/004212
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Carlos Nagib Khalil
Lucia Cristina Ferreira Leite
Original Assignee
Petroleo Brasileiro S.A.-Petrobras
Benson, John, Everett
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Application filed by Petroleo Brasileiro S.A.-Petrobras, Benson, John, Everett filed Critical Petroleo Brasileiro S.A.-Petrobras
Priority to PCT/GB2003/004212 priority Critical patent/WO2005030911A2/en
Priority to AU2003267657A priority patent/AU2003267657A1/en
Publication of WO2005030911A2 publication Critical patent/WO2005030911A2/en

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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10LFUELS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; NATURAL GAS; SYNTHETIC NATURAL GAS OBTAINED BY PROCESSES NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES C10G, C10K; LIQUEFIED PETROLEUM GAS; ADDING MATERIALS TO FUELS OR FIRES TO REDUCE SMOKE OR UNDESIRABLE DEPOSITS OR TO FACILITATE SOOT REMOVAL; FIRELIGHTERS
    • C10L1/00Liquid carbonaceous fuels
    • C10L1/02Liquid carbonaceous fuels essentially based on components consisting of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen only
    • C10L1/026Liquid carbonaceous fuels essentially based on components consisting of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen only for compression ignition
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11CFATTY ACIDS FROM FATS, OILS OR WAXES; CANDLES; FATS, OILS OR FATTY ACIDS BY CHEMICAL MODIFICATION OF FATS, OILS, OR FATTY ACIDS OBTAINED THEREFROM
    • C11C3/00Fats, oils, or fatty acids by chemical modification of fats, oils, or fatty acids obtained therefrom
    • C11C3/003Fats, oils, or fatty acids by chemical modification of fats, oils, or fatty acids obtained therefrom by esterification of fatty acids with alcohols
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10GCRACKING HYDROCARBON OILS; PRODUCTION OF LIQUID HYDROCARBON MIXTURES, e.g. BY DESTRUCTIVE HYDROGENATION, OLIGOMERISATION, POLYMERISATION; RECOVERY OF HYDROCARBON OILS FROM OIL-SHALE, OIL-SAND, OR GASES; REFINING MIXTURES MAINLY CONSISTING OF HYDROCARBONS; REFORMING OF NAPHTHA; MINERAL WAXES
    • C10G2300/00Aspects relating to hydrocarbon processing covered by groups C10G1/00 - C10G99/00
    • C10G2300/10Feedstock materials
    • C10G2300/1011Biomass
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02EREDUCTION OF GREENHOUSE GAS [GHG] EMISSIONS, RELATED TO ENERGY GENERATION, TRANSMISSION OR DISTRIBUTION
    • Y02E50/00Technologies for the production of fuel of non-fossil origin
    • Y02E50/10Biofuels, e.g. bio-diesel
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02PCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES IN THE PRODUCTION OR PROCESSING OF GOODS
    • Y02P30/00Technologies relating to oil refining and petrochemical industry
    • Y02P30/20Technologies relating to oil refining and petrochemical industry using bio-feedstock

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to an integrated process for producing biodiesel-long chain fatty acid alkyl monoesters from vegetable oils, to be used as fuel or as fuel additives and economically viable by-products, such fatty acids being present in oleaginous seeds. More specifically, the present invention relates to a process for producing biodiesel by transesterification, whereby instead of reacting alcohol and castor bean-extracted oil, it is the castor bean seeds themselves that are made to react with alcohol, in the presence of an alkaline catalyst, to yield a fuel product made up of ethyl monoesters of the fatty acids present in those seeds.
  • glycerin a starchy product free from ricin useful for the formulation of cattle food and also used as raw material for producing ethyl alcohol or as a fertilizer and finally a mineral-rich product from the castor bean hull that may be used as a fertilizer.
  • Biodiesel Fuel B100
  • Blend Stock for Distillate Fuels defined by the American Society for Testing Materials (ASTM) and designed as PS 121 - 99.
  • biodiesel meant the vegetable oil itself, as used in diesel engines. Since petroleum diesel contains C 8 -C 22 hydrocarbon molecules, and vegetable oil C- ⁇ 2 -C ⁇ 8 moieties linked to a glycerol residue, the similarity of the molecules led to experiments for replacing petroleum-derived molecules for vegetable oils.
  • the heating until the ethyl alcohol boiling point used in the process of PI BR 8003739 entrains vegetable components present in the seeds that are harmful to the produced fuel, such as pigments, vitamins, gum-generating phospholipids and even essential oils.
  • the catalyst used, NaOH yields soaps that should be withdrawn from the final product.
  • free glycerol is left in the final product, which on burning in the engine yields acrolein, a potent carcinogen.
  • the glycerol amount based on the reaction stoichiometry is nearly 10% by weight of the final product. This is exceedingly more than allowed by the present ASTM PS 121-99, limited to 0.02wt%.
  • the technique still needs an economically viable process for preparing biodiesel where the transesterification of the triglycerides present in an oleaginous seed be effected directly and integrally on such seeds, dispensing with the step of oil extraction from such seeds and the need to supply ethyl alcohol from external sources while at the same time producing pure glycerin and valuable agricultural co-products, such a process being described and claimed in the present application.
  • the present invention relates to a process for producing biodiesel for fuel, the process using directly the castor bean seeds as raw material to promote the transesterification of vegetable oils contained in same seeds with anhydrous ethyl alcohol, the reaction being catalyzed by a basic catalyst.
  • This makes possible extremely high conversions without soap generation, the produced biodiesel fuel having sufficiently polar features to allow it to work as a co-solvent in the stabilization . of anhydrous or hydrated ethanol admixtures with petroleum related products such as diesel oil and gasoline presently in use in Brazil.
  • the invention makes possible to produce all the ethyl alcohol required by the transesterification reaction through a process for conventional carbohydrate fermentation of a portion of the reaction residual filter cake. Further, the present invention promotes the conversion of the hull and final residua into an agricultural fertilizer. Still further, since the filter cake is ricin-free, the present invention makes possible to use the residual filter cake as a constituent of cattle food. Still, the present invention provides, by decantation, the separation of the obtained glycerin, which may be used as a raw material for related industries. The present invention further provides an economically viable process for producing biodiesel that dispenses with any government subsidies to its commercialization. The present invention provides therefore a sustainable process for producing biodiesel.
  • FIGURE 1 BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING FIGURE 1 attached is a flowsheet that illustrates the process of the invention.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED MODES The present process is directed to producing a biodiesel fuel straight from oleaginous seeds, by transesterifying the triglycerides present in oleaginous seeds, such as soybean, peanuts, sunflower, and colza, being specially adapted to castor bean seeds and anhydrous ethyl alcohol in the presence of an alkaline catalyst.
  • the process may be carried out in a continuou s or batch mode, or by alternating continuos and batch modes.
  • the seed on which is to be applied the transesteriTication process- o the invention for producing biodiesel may be any triglycerides-rich oleaginous seed, that is, a seed having between 15% and- 70% by weight of esterifiable triglycerides based on the total seed weight.
  • Seeds useful for the purposes of the invention are, for example, those of sunflower, peanuts, colza or soybean. Particularly preferred is the castor bean seed, this being due to its easy production in lean soils, with the possibilit/ of consortium cultures with sweet manioc or beans, and small scale, familiar cultures that dispense with agricultural intensive technology.
  • the seeds are made to contact an alcohol, preferably anhydrous alcohol, for example methyl alcohol or ethyl alcohol, in the amount of 4:1 to 0.5:1 parts, preferably of from 1.5:1 to 0.5:1 parts.
  • an alcohol preferably anhydrous alcohol, for example methyl alcohol or ethyl alcohol
  • the optimum ratio of ethyl alcohol to seeds wil l be a function of the kind of seed, and the equipment used. Thus for an equipment that is not mechanically driven, it may be required to use more ethyl alcohol to render the mixture fluid and workable. In industrial facilities, less fluid mixtures may be used. In any case any excess alcohol is to be recycled.
  • the alcohol employed is the esterifying agent, the reaction solvent as well as a vehicle for the solid phase.
  • the amount of ethyl alcohol is ca. 15% based on the oil contained in the seed.
  • Castor bean seeds contain 5Owt% oil.
  • the reactor is provided with a suitable propeller, which turns the reaction mass into a homogeneous suspension after a period of 15 to 30 minutes.
  • a catalyst is normally employed.
  • Catalysts useful for the practice of the invention are alkaline alkoxides or preferably an alcoholic solution of sodium or potassium ethanoate or titanium tetrahydropropoxide.
  • the catalyst amount is of from 0.1 to 5.0%, preferably of from 0.3 to 1.5% by weight based on the weight of the seed feed.
  • the transesterification reaction occurs at a temperature between 30°C and 78°C, preferably between 45°C and 55°C, under reflux, for a period between 30 to 90 minutes, when a conversion between 98 to 100% of the triglycerides into fatty acid monoesters is attained.
  • the hot products are separated by filtration of the reaction mass followed by atmospheric distillation of the ethyl alcohol remaining in the liquid phase leaving the filter.
  • the distiller liquid is transferred to a decanting tank, where it will stand for a.
  • the castor bean seed feed (11 ) is processed (12) with the aid of vibrating sieves provided with a hot air vent in order to withdraw foreign vegetable elements and drying until humidity content lower than 0.5% by weight.
  • the seed feed (11 ) is directly fed to a reactor (14).
  • anhydrous alcohol from a storage tank (10) is poured on the seeds.
  • the heterogeneous feed of reactor (14) is then comminuted at ambient temperature.
  • Catalyst (13) is then added to reactor (14) without any heating, and then heating of the reaction mass is started in order to promote the transesterification reaction until the 98 to 100% conversion of the triglycerides into fatty acid monoesters is attained.
  • the hot reaction mass is filtered (15) and the liquid phase (17) leaving the filter is pumped to a distiller (20) where ethanol remaining in the liquid phase is distilled (21 ) under atmospheric pressure.
  • the distiller liquid is transferred to a decanting tank (23) where it will stay for the required period of time to separate raw glycerin - lower phase - from ethyl esters - upper phase.
  • the glycerin phase (26) and the ester phase (27) are directed to distinct neutralization columns (30) and (31 ), one for each product, columns (30) and (31 ) being filled with a slightly acidic ion exchange resin.
  • the triglycerides transesterification reaction carried out on the very seeds that contain those triglycerides not only makes the process simpler, but also renders it more economically interesting since: a) it lowers the raw material cost by dispensing with the use of vegetable oils that require a pre-processing to be extracted from the seeds and then refined; b) a conventional fermentation process based on the carbohydrates present in the reaction residual seed cake separated from the alcohol phase that contained esters and glycerin, yields ethyl alcohol to be used in the reaction; c) allows to re-utilize hulls, wastes and ashes produced during the seed cleaning, hulling and drying steps, yielding a fertilizer that may be used in the castor bean seed culture itself.
  • the present process is environmentally friendly since: a) it does not yield residues that cannot be processed; b) its main product, to be used as a substitute for diesel, is less pollutant and provides petroleum savings, this being potentially important for non-oil producing countries, or countries that do not produce it in sufficient amounts, being forced to import petroleum oil to obtain diesel oil.
  • the present invention will now be illustrated by the following example, which should not be construed as limiting same.
  • EXAMPLE 1000g of raw castor bean seeds (Ricinus Communis L) of the Brazilian variety known as "Bull Heart”, processed as described above were added to a reactor together with 800g ethyl alcohol and comminuted under vigorous agitation, at ambient temperature, until the reaction mass was a fluid, homogeneous suspension. Then 40g of sodium alkoxide catalyst were incorporated to the mixture and for 1 hour under moderated agitation and reflux, under atmospheric pressure and constant temperature of 50°C, the transesterification reaction of said seeds was carried out.
  • the reactor charge was cooled to 40°C and filtered, yielding 600g of solid phase and 1240g of a filtrate that after being distilled at atmospheric pressure, provided the recovery of 680g raw ethyl alcohol condensate and 560g of a liquid residue, remaining in the distiller, made up of a mixture of esters, glycerin and other by-products.
  • this residue indicated two distinct phases that, after separation, weighed 55g of raw glycerin (lower phase) and 505g of esters (upper phase) that after neutralization in a column provided with an ion exchange resin with acidic sites had the features shown in Table 1 below.
  • the solid phase was dried in a vacuum oven, provided with a condenser at 50°C during 16 hours at a 600mm Hg pressure, which made possible to recover an additional 80g ethyl alcohol and 520g of dry meal.
  • the dried meal was then sieved in a set of vibrating sieves that yielded two main fractions.
  • the finer fraction having a granulometry lower than 20 mesh Tyler, weighed 300g and could be directed to a specific fermentation process to yield ethyl alcohol, or else to be stored and used as cattle feed.
  • Table 2 below lists results obtained after mixtures of 5 wt% and 10 wt% of the obtained esters with Diesel D, the metropolitan diesel produced in the Refineries owned by the Applicant, the features of which are also indicated in Table 2. It can be seen that by analogy with typical data for Diesel D itself, the biodiesel product of the invention may be used in admixture with Diesel D as a fuel in urban vehicles. The advantages for the improvement of the town air quality are evidenced by the rise in the resulting cetane number that makes possible the more complete fuel burning by buses and trucks engines, which ultimately lowers pollution. There is further a corresponding reduction in sulfur content by dilution, with sulfur being also considered a serious pollutant resulting from the burning of conventional diesel oil.

Abstract

An integrated process is described for producing biodiesel from oleaginous seeds, preferably castor bean seeds, comprising a transesterification reaction where the seeds themselves react with anhydrous ethyl alcohol in the presence of an alkaline catalyst. The resulting ethyl esters are then separated by decantation and neutralized and used as fuel for diesel engines, co-solvents for diesel and gasoline mixtures with anhydrous or hydrated ethyl alcohol. The solid fractions may be used as fertilizers, for feeding cattle and as a raw material for producing ethyl alcohol.

Description

PROCESS FOR PRODUCING BIODIESEL FIELD OF THE INVENTION The present invention relates to an integrated process for producing biodiesel-long chain fatty acid alkyl monoesters from vegetable oils, to be used as fuel or as fuel additives and economically viable by-products, such fatty acids being present in oleaginous seeds. More specifically, the present invention relates to a process for producing biodiesel by transesterification, whereby instead of reacting alcohol and castor bean-extracted oil, it is the castor bean seeds themselves that are made to react with alcohol, in the presence of an alkaline catalyst, to yield a fuel product made up of ethyl monoesters of the fatty acids present in those seeds. Also obtained is glycerin, a starchy product free from ricin useful for the formulation of cattle food and also used as raw material for producing ethyl alcohol or as a fertilizer and finally a mineral-rich product from the castor bean hull that may be used as a fertilizer.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION Products known or classified as biodiesel are synthetic liquid fuels obtained from renewable raw materials and made up of mixtures of long chain fatty acid alkyl monoesters derived from vegetable oils or animal fat. The use of such products as fuel, by themselves or in admixture with other products is well known. The reference international specification for this kind of product is the "Provisional Specification for Biodiesel Fuel (B100) Blend Stock for Distillate Fuels" defined by the American Society for Testing Materials (ASTM) and designed as PS 121 - 99. Conventional processes for the industrial production of this kind of fuel are the transesterification unit processes where the triglycehdes that make up the vegetable oils or the animal fats are made to react with lower alcohols, in the presence of acidic or basic catalysts. US patent 4,695,411 teaches one of these processes for producing a fatty acid monoester composition, useful as a fuel for a diesel engine as a replacement of gas oil. According to the teachings of said US patent, a transesterification of oils or greases of vegetable or animal origin is performed in three distinct steps, using four different anhydrous or hydrated alcohols, in the presence of acidic or basic catalysts. A similar process is described in US patent 4,364,743, which provides a list of vegetable oils that was made to react with various alcohols in the presence of the following catalysts: sodium alkoxide, sodium or potassium hydroxide and titanium tetrahydropropoxide (basic catalysts) or the sulfuric, alkyl sulfonic or aryl sulfonic acids. Other documents forward similar processes with modifications in the production steps of other kinds of biodiesel, none of them mentioning however the straight use of the oleaginous seeds as raw material for the transesterification reaction. These documents are US patents 5,525,126; US 6,015,440; US 6,174,501 and US 6,21 1 ,390. Other patents, such as for example US patents 5,578,090; US 6,017,369 and US 6,129,773, teach and prove the technical viability of using several kinds of biodiesel, as such or in admixture with petroleum diesel as a fuel for vehicle or stationary engines. In one way or another, and at different sophistication levels, the basic feature of these prior art processes is always a transesterification of vegetable oil or animal fat triglycerides, with lower primary alcohols, catalyzed by an acidic or basic, soluble or not, catalyst. Product and by-product (esters and glycerin) refining is performed at different quality and purity grades, after the physical separation of the two liquid phases formed in the reactor after distilling the remaining excess alcohol. It should be pointed out that in all the cited patents either the process is to be carried out on a high cost, purified or semi-purified vegetable oil, or it is carried out on a sort of waste or by-product having low oil content. This means most of the time a high cost/benefit ratio, since the starting raw material - vegetable oil - has a. higher price than the final biodiesel product. Further, according to the state-of-the-art technique, the alcohol, either methyl or ethyl alcohol, even if partly recycled or recovered, must be supplied from external sources. That is why, in spite of the huge government interest of several countries on the biodiesel technology and production, still heavy subsidies are required for supplying biodiesel in gas stations. On the contrary, the process of the present application, by carrying the transesterification reaction on seeds and generating all the required reaction ethyl alcohol, besides other valuable co-products such as pure glycerin, agricultural fertilizers and cattle feed, dispenses with subsidizing and may be produced industrially at a reasonable cost without any burden to the economy. Brazilian patent PI BR 8003739 teaches a process for extracting vegetable oils from seeds for obtaining a fuel using methyl or ethyl alcohol with the concomitant partial modification of oil into methyl or ethyl esters that a re soluble in the corresponding alcohols. The so-obtained fuel is useful for diesel or similar engines. In spite of the reported transesterification reaction and the resulting fuel, the technique of the said Brazilian patent does not lead to a biodiesel product as specified in the above cited ASTM PS 121-99 Method. To begin with, at the time of the research that led to said patent was carried out, the term biodiesel meant the vegetable oil itself, as used in diesel engines. Since petroleum diesel contains C8-C22 hydrocarbon molecules, and vegetable oil C-ι2-Cι8 moieties linked to a glycerol residue, the similarity of the molecules led to experiments for replacing petroleum-derived molecules for vegetable oils. It should be noted that the heating until the ethyl alcohol boiling point used in the process of PI BR 8003739 entrains vegetable components present in the seeds that are harmful to the produced fuel, such as pigments, vitamins, gum-generating phospholipids and even essential oils. The catalyst used, NaOH, yields soaps that should be withdrawn from the final product. Also, free glycerol is left in the final product, which on burning in the engine yields acrolein, a potent carcinogen. The glycerol amount based on the reaction stoichiometry is nearly 10% by weight of the final product. This is exceedingly more than allowed by the present ASTM PS 121-99, limited to 0.02wt%. Therefore, in spite of the state-of-the-art developments, the technique still needs an economically viable process for preparing biodiesel where the transesterification of the triglycerides present in an oleaginous seed be effected directly and integrally on such seeds, dispensing with the step of oil extraction from such seeds and the need to supply ethyl alcohol from external sources while at the same time producing pure glycerin and valuable agricultural co-products, such a process being described and claimed in the present application. SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION The present invention relates to a process for producing biodiesel for fuel, the process using directly the castor bean seeds as raw material to promote the transesterification of vegetable oils contained in same seeds with anhydrous ethyl alcohol, the reaction being catalyzed by a basic catalyst. This makes possible extremely high conversions without soap generation, the produced biodiesel fuel having sufficiently polar features to allow it to work as a co-solvent in the stabilization . of anhydrous or hydrated ethanol admixtures with petroleum related products such as diesel oil and gasoline presently in use in Brazil. Still, the invention makes possible to produce all the ethyl alcohol required by the transesterification reaction through a process for conventional carbohydrate fermentation of a portion of the reaction residual filter cake. Further, the present invention promotes the conversion of the hull and final residua into an agricultural fertilizer. Still further, since the filter cake is ricin-free, the present invention makes possible to use the residual filter cake as a constituent of cattle food. Still, the present invention provides, by decantation, the separation of the obtained glycerin, which may be used as a raw material for related industries. The present invention further provides an economically viable process for producing biodiesel that dispenses with any government subsidies to its commercialization. The present invention provides therefore a sustainable process for producing biodiesel. BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING FIGURE 1 attached is a flowsheet that illustrates the process of the invention. DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED MODES The present process is directed to producing a biodiesel fuel straight from oleaginous seeds, by transesterifying the triglycerides present in oleaginous seeds, such as soybean, peanuts, sunflower, and colza, being specially adapted to castor bean seeds and anhydrous ethyl alcohol in the presence of an alkaline catalyst. The process may be carried out in a continuou s or batch mode, or by alternating continuos and batch modes. The seed on which is to be applied the transesteriTication process- o the invention for producing biodiesel may be any triglycerides-rich oleaginous seed, that is, a seed having between 15% and- 70% by weight of esterifiable triglycerides based on the total seed weight. Seeds useful for the purposes of the invention are, for example, those of sunflower, peanuts, colza or soybean. Particularly preferred is the castor bean seed, this being due to its easy production in lean soils, with the possibilit/ of consortium cultures with sweet manioc or beans, and small scale, familiar cultures that dispense with agricultural intensive technology. According to the present process, the seeds are made to contact an alcohol, preferably anhydrous alcohol, for example methyl alcohol or ethyl alcohol, in the amount of 4:1 to 0.5:1 parts, preferably of from 1.5:1 to 0.5:1 parts. The optimum ratio of ethyl alcohol to seeds wil l be a function of the kind of seed, and the equipment used. Thus for an equipment that is not mechanically driven, it may be required to use more ethyl alcohol to render the mixture fluid and workable. In industrial facilities, less fluid mixtures may be used. In any case any excess alcohol is to be recycled. It should be pointed out that according to the invention the alcohol employed is the esterifying agent, the reaction solvent as well as a vehicle for the solid phase. In terms of the transesterification reaction only, the amount of ethyl alcohol is ca. 15% based on the oil contained in the seed. Castor bean seeds contain 5Owt% oil. In order to make the contact easier and hasten the reaction, the reactor is provided with a suitable propeller, which turns the reaction mass into a homogeneous suspension after a period of 15 to 30 minutes. Once the suspension if formed, and in order to shift the triglycerides transesterification reaction towards the products, a catalyst is normally employed. Catalysts useful for the practice of the invention are alkaline alkoxides or preferably an alcoholic solution of sodium or potassium ethanoate or titanium tetrahydropropoxide. The catalyst amount is of from 0.1 to 5.0%, preferably of from 0.3 to 1.5% by weight based on the weight of the seed feed. The transesterification reaction occurs at a temperature between 30°C and 78°C, preferably between 45°C and 55°C, under reflux, for a period between 30 to 90 minutes, when a conversion between 98 to 100% of the triglycerides into fatty acid monoesters is attained. After the end of the reaction, the hot products are separated by filtration of the reaction mass followed by atmospheric distillation of the ethyl alcohol remaining in the liquid phase leaving the filter. At the end of the condensed alcohol collection, the distiller liquid is transferred to a decanting tank, where it will stand for a. period sufficient to separate the raw glycerin - lower phase - from the ethyl esters - upper phase. After being collected, the glycerin phase and the ester phase are directed to distinct neutralization columns, one for each product, the colu mns being filled with slightly acidic ion exchange resins. The filter cake is employed as a source of alcohol production, and may afterwards be recycled to the process or used as cattle feed. Seed hulls are also utilized as an agricultural product. The invention will now be described based on the flowsheet of Figure 1 attached to the present specification. Previously to the process itself, the castor bean seed feed (11 ) is processed (12) with the aid of vibrating sieves provided with a hot air vent in order to withdraw foreign vegetable elements and drying until humidity content lower than 0.5% by weight. Upon leaving the sieves, the seed feed (11 ) is directly fed to a reactor (14). Then anhydrous alcohol from a storage tank (10) is poured on the seeds. The heterogeneous feed of reactor (14) is then comminuted at ambient temperature. Catalyst (13) is then added to reactor (14) without any heating, and then heating of the reaction mass is started in order to promote the transesterification reaction until the 98 to 100% conversion of the triglycerides into fatty acid monoesters is attained. Then the hot reaction mass is filtered (15) and the liquid phase (17) leaving the filter is pumped to a distiller (20) where ethanol remaining in the liquid phase is distilled (21 ) under atmospheric pressure. After the end of the condensed alcohol collection, the distiller liquid is transferred to a decanting tank (23) where it will stay for the required period of time to separate raw glycerin - lower phase - from ethyl esters - upper phase. After being collected, the glycerin phase (26) and the ester phase (27) are directed to distinct neutralization columns (30) and (31 ), one for each product, columns (30) and (31 ) being filled with a slightly acidic ion exchange resin. Typical analyses of the two kinds of products obtained in the experiments are listed in Table 2 below. After being recovered from the filter press (15) linings, the solid phase (16) is dried in a vacuum oven (19) at 45°C during ca. 16 h to recover the remaining ethanol (18) still retained in the mass. Then the obtained dried flour is sieved (22) in a set of vibrating sieves to separate the finest solids of granulometry lower than 20 mm, that is the carbohydrate fraction (24). This fraction (24) will then be submitted to a hydrolysis and fermentation process (28) -so as to render possible that after the atmospheric distillation (32) of the remaining residue in the fermenting tank, ethanol may be produced to make up the alcohol feed to the transesterification reactor (14). This step is not required when the flour is directed to cattle feeding. As for the coarser fraction of the flour, chiefly made up of the seed hulls (25), such coarser fraction is milled in a ball mill (29) until it reaches the approximate granulometry of 20 mm. It is then added of mineral supplements required for making up .formulations (33) of fertilizers (37) suitable to be used in the castor bean culture itself. The triglycerides transesterification reaction carried out on the very seeds that contain those triglycerides not only makes the process simpler, but also renders it more economically interesting since: a) it lowers the raw material cost by dispensing with the use of vegetable oils that require a pre-processing to be extracted from the seeds and then refined; b) a conventional fermentation process based on the carbohydrates present in the reaction residual seed cake separated from the alcohol phase that contained esters and glycerin, yields ethyl alcohol to be used in the reaction; c) allows to re-utilize hulls, wastes and ashes produced during the seed cleaning, hulling and drying steps, yielding a fertilizer that may be used in the castor bean seed culture itself. Besides, the present process is environmentally friendly since: a) it does not yield residues that cannot be processed; b) its main product, to be used as a substitute for diesel, is less pollutant and provides petroleum savings, this being potentially important for non-oil producing countries, or countries that do not produce it in sufficient amounts, being forced to import petroleum oil to obtain diesel oil. The present invention will now be illustrated by the following example, which should not be construed as limiting same. EXAMPLE 1000g of raw castor bean seeds (Ricinus Communis L) of the Brazilian variety known as "Bull Heart", processed as described above were added to a reactor together with 800g ethyl alcohol and comminuted under vigorous agitation, at ambient temperature, until the reaction mass was a fluid, homogeneous suspension. Then 40g of sodium alkoxide catalyst were incorporated to the mixture and for 1 hour under moderated agitation and reflux, under atmospheric pressure and constant temperature of 50°C, the transesterification reaction of said seeds was carried out. Then, the reactor charge was cooled to 40°C and filtered,, yielding 600g of solid phase and 1240g of a filtrate that after being distilled at atmospheric pressure, provided the recovery of 680g raw ethyl alcohol condensate and 560g of a liquid residue, remaining in the distiller, made up of a mixture of esters, glycerin and other by-products. Once transferred to a decanter where it was kept for two hours at ambient temperature of ca. 25°C, this residue indicated two distinct phases that, after separation, weighed 55g of raw glycerin (lower phase) and 505g of esters (upper phase) that after neutralization in a column provided with an ion exchange resin with acidic sites had the features shown in Table 1 below. The solid phase was dried in a vacuum oven, provided with a condenser at 50°C during 16 hours at a 600mm Hg pressure, which made possible to recover an additional 80g ethyl alcohol and 520g of dry meal. The dried meal was then sieved in a set of vibrating sieves that yielded two main fractions. The finer fraction having a granulometry lower than 20 mesh Tyler, weighed 300g and could be directed to a specific fermentation process to yield ethyl alcohol, or else to be stored and used as cattle feed. The coarser fraction, having granulometry higher than 40 mesh Tyler, weighed 100g and after being milled in a ball mill until an average grain size of 20 mesh was directed to fertilizer formulation where it could be added of a few mineral supplements so as to turn it suitable for use in the castor bean seed culture itself Intermediate fractions are continuously reprocessed. Table 1 below lists the main features of the esters resulting from the Example. TABLE 1
Figure imgf000009_0001
Table 2 below lists results obtained after mixtures of 5 wt% and 10 wt% of the obtained esters with Diesel D, the metropolitan diesel produced in the Refineries owned by the Applicant, the features of which are also indicated in Table 2. It can be seen that by analogy with typical data for Diesel D itself, the biodiesel product of the invention may be used in admixture with Diesel D as a fuel in urban vehicles. The advantages for the improvement of the town air quality are evidenced by the rise in the resulting cetane number that makes possible the more complete fuel burning by buses and trucks engines, which ultimately lowers pollution. There is further a corresponding reduction in sulfur content by dilution, with sulfur being also considered a serious pollutant resulting from the burning of conventional diesel oil. It should also be emphasized that the presence in the molecule of the ethyl esters of castor bean oil (91% ethyl ricinoleate) of a hydroxyl group (14.7% oxygen) conveys to these products an extra polarity. This makes them able to work as co-solvents for stabilizing anhydrous or hydrated ethyl alcohol mixtures with diesel and gasoline at much higher levels than those obtained in present days. A further advantage is obtained by considering that the presence of those esters in these ternary mixtures also increase the tolerance ability of same to water contamination, so that they resist for longer times to undesirable ethyl alcohol stratification generally occurring in biodiesel and gasoline storage tanks. Data from Table 2 below lead to the conclusion that the features of both biodiesel compositions are similar to those of an ordinary metropolitan biodiesel, as diesel D. TABLE 2
Figure imgf000010_0001
Notes: (1 ) Technical Rules National Fuels Department - 02/97 - Regulation 32, of August 04, 1997. (2) 95% vol. diesel D and 5% vol. of the exemplary esters (3) 90% vol. diesel D and 10% vol. of the exemplary esters (4) Clear and free from impurities A study carried out by the Applicant on the economical feasibility of the present process indicated that by accounting the cost of the raw material, that is, seeds, ethyl alcohol (practically no-cost since it is a co-product), catalyst and process costs, and on the other hand, the profits from the main product biodiesel, as well as co-products technical grade glycerin, cattle feed and fertilizer leads to a final price of the biodiesel around US$ 0.30 per liter, which is highly competitive.

Claims

While the invention has been described based on preferred embodiments, the description above should not be construed as limiting the invention, the said limitation being restricted to the scope of the appended claims.
We claim
1. A process of producing alkyl esters for use in biodiesel, which process comprises: a) Preparing in a reactor an homogeneous suspension of oleaginous seeds and an anhydrous alcohol in a weight ratio of 4: 1 to 0.5 : 1 , at ambient temperature, so as to obtain an emulsion; b) Adding an alkaline alkoxide catalyst to the emulsion obtained in a), the amount of catalyst being of from 0.1 to 5 wt% based on the weight of seeds, and allowing the transesterification reaction to occur during 30 to 90 minutes at temperatures between 30 and 78 °C, so as to obtain the desired alkyl esters at 98 to 100% conversion; c) Separating the transesterification products, so as to obtain a liquid phase and a solid phase; d) From the liquid phase, recovering the alcohol by distillation and decanting the remaining phase so as to obtain glycerin and the desired alkyl esters; and e) From the solid phase, by drying and sieving, recovering carbohydrates for fermentation or cattle feeding and hulls for fertilizer formulation.
2. A process according to claim 1, wherein the oleaginous seed is a sunflower, colza, soybean or peanut seed.
3. A process according to claim 1, wherein the oleaginous seed is a castor bean seed.
4. A process according to any preceding claim wherein the seed has previously been subjected to processing and drying. 5. A process according to any preceding claim, wherein the seed to alcohol weight ratio is 1.5:1 to 0.5:1.
6. A process according to any preceding claim wherein the catalyst is sodium or potassium ethanoate.
7. A process according to any preceding claim wherein the catalyst is used in the amount of 1.5 wt%. 8. A process according to any preceding claim wherein the reaction is carried out at 45 to 55 °C.
9. A process according to any preceding claim wherein the reaction is carried out for 40 to 60 minutes.
10. A process according to any preceding claim wherein the alcohol recovered in step (d) is completely recycled to step (a).
11. A process according to any preceding claim wherein the alkyl ester reaction products are neutralized and formulated into biodiesel suitable for use as fuel.
12. A process according to any preceding claim wherein the alkyl ester reaction products are neutralized and formulated as co-solvents in diesel and gasoline admixtures with anhydrous or hydrated ethyl alcohol.
13. A process according to any preceding claim wherein the carbohydrates recovered from the solid phase are sieved to separate a fine f action, having a granulometry up to 20 mesh Tyler, rich in carbohydrates (89.5 wt%), which is used to produce ethyl alcohol by a conventional fermentation process. 1 . A process according to claim 13, wherein the amount of ethyl alcohol obtained by the conventional fermentation process on the carbohydrates separated after the completion of the transesterification reaction is the amount required for performing the transesterification reaction.
15. A process according to any preceding claim wherein the carbohydrates recovered from the solid phase, and freed from ricin when castor beans are used, are sieved to separate a fine fraction of up to 20 mesh Tyler granulometry, rich in carbohydrates (89.5 wt%), for use as cattle feed.
16. A process according to claim 15, wherein a coarser fraction obtained by sieving the solid phase having granulometry higher than 40 mesh Tyler is milled until an average grain size of 20 mesh Tyler for use in fertilizer formulation and recycling to oleaginous seed culture.
PCT/GB2003/004212 2003-09-29 2003-09-29 Process for producing biodiesel WO2005030911A2 (en)

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Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN100344732C (en) * 2005-07-06 2007-10-24 中国科学院山西煤炭化学研究所 Method of making biodiesel oil by subcritical methanol phase solid acid alkali catalytic oil fat ester exchange
FR2903116A1 (en) * 2006-06-29 2008-01-04 Ct Valorisation Ind Agro Resso Obtaining ethylic ester, useful as biodiesel, comprises pressing seeds to obtain pressure oil and fat cakes, extracting ethanol, converting triglyceride to triglyceride ethylic ester, evaporating ethanol and separating glycerin phase
US8142527B2 (en) 2005-03-21 2012-03-27 Ben-Gurion University Of The Negev Research And Development Authority Production of diesel fuel from vegetable and animal oils
WO2013045799A2 (en) 2011-09-30 2013-04-04 Arkema France Method for extraction from lesquerella seeds

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8142527B2 (en) 2005-03-21 2012-03-27 Ben-Gurion University Of The Negev Research And Development Authority Production of diesel fuel from vegetable and animal oils
CN100344732C (en) * 2005-07-06 2007-10-24 中国科学院山西煤炭化学研究所 Method of making biodiesel oil by subcritical methanol phase solid acid alkali catalytic oil fat ester exchange
FR2903116A1 (en) * 2006-06-29 2008-01-04 Ct Valorisation Ind Agro Resso Obtaining ethylic ester, useful as biodiesel, comprises pressing seeds to obtain pressure oil and fat cakes, extracting ethanol, converting triglyceride to triglyceride ethylic ester, evaporating ethanol and separating glycerin phase
WO2013045799A2 (en) 2011-09-30 2013-04-04 Arkema France Method for extraction from lesquerella seeds
US9220287B2 (en) 2011-09-30 2015-12-29 Arkema France Lesquerella seed products and method and device for producing same

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