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Pre-treatment of used cooking oils for the production of green chemicals: A review

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 289, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2020.125129

Keywords

Used cooking oil; Oleochemicals; Pre-treatment; Refining; Valorization; Green chemicals

Funding

  1. Royal Academy of Engineering [IAPP18-19\65]
  2. Newton Fund, Institutional Links grants [526061819]
  3. MinCiencias [584]
  4. Universidad Nacional de Colombia, HERMES project [48222]

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The utilization of waste lipids in the production of higher value-added and green chemicals will be a common practice in the future to enhance the sustainability of the olechemical industry. Refining processes are necessary to obtain suitable oleochemical feedstocks due to the heterogeneous nature and impurities present in waste lipids. Various technologies for pre-treatment, purification, and refining of waste lipids have been reviewed in this work, with a focus on transforming used cooking oils into oleochemical raw materials.
Exploitation of waste lipids in the production of higher value-added and green chemicals will become a common practice in the future to enhance the sustainability of the oleochemical industry. However, waste lipids are highly heterogeneous and contain a large variety of impurities that can affect potential valorization routes. Thus, there is need for carry out refining processes to obtain suitable oleochemical feedstocks. This work reviews the available and potential technologies for the pre-treatment, purification and refining of waste lipids, emphasizing the transformation of used cooking oils (UCOs) into oleochemical raw materials. Initially, a description of the world generation and supply of UCOs is presented, and some potential valorization alternatives are reported. Then, the chemical nature and composition of typical UCOs is considered, and the main physicochemical properties are recognized in order to identify suitable separation processes for impurities removal. In particular, acidity and moisture reduction are priorities considering that they affect further thermal, chemical and biochemical transformations. Also, toxic compounds need to be reduced to enable the use as fermentation substrates, or as raw material for value-added application. Nitrogen-, phosphorus-, and sulfur-containing compounds as well as polar compounds must to be removed to enhance sensorial properties, and to avoid negative effects during subsequent transformations. Among the most popular up-grading methods, esterification, adsorption, solvent extraction, and distillation have been adopted industrially. Also, some intensification alternatives have been effectively implemented in UCO refining (e.g. reactive separations). (c) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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