4.6 Article

Sustainable Biodiesel Production by Transesterification of Waste Cooking Oil and Recycling of Wastewater Rich in Glycerol as a Feed to Microalgae

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su14010273

Keywords

waste oil; biodiesel; transesterification; kinetics; recycle; microalgae; wastewater; glycerol

Funding

  1. University of Genoa

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The amount of solid and liquid organic waste and wastewater is increasing globally, necessitating their reuse and recycling. This study proposes a sustainable process that involves transesterification of waste cooking oil to produce biodiesel, coupled with recycling of wastewater rich in glycerol. The study analyzes the factors that influence the kinetics of the transesterification reaction and evaluates the quality of the biodiesel produced. The results demonstrate the feasibility and competitiveness of the proposed process on a global scale.
The amount of solid and liquid organic waste and wastewater is continuously increasing all over the world. The necessity of their reuse and recycling is, therefore, becoming more and more pressing. Furthermore, the limited fossil fuel resources, in conjunction with the need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, advocate the production of renewable fuels. In this work, we analyze a sustainable second-generation process to produce biodiesel by transesterification of waste cooking oil, coupled with a third-generation process in cascade for recycling the incoming wastewater. Since this latter is rich in glycerol, it is used as a feed for microalgae, from which oil can be extracted and added to the waste cooking oil to further produce biodiesel and close the cycle. We studied the influence of different factors like temperature, catalyst load, and reactants ratio on the kinetics of transesterification of the waste oil and estimated the kinetic parameters by different kinetic schemes. The obtained values of activation energies and pre-exponential factors at chosen conditions of T = 60 & DEG;C and catalyst load of 0.6% w/w in methanol are: E-a,E-direct = 35,661 J mol(-1), E-a,E-reverse = 72,989 J mol(-1), k(0,direct )= 9.7708 [dm(3) mol(-1)](3) min(-1), and k(0,reverse) = 24,810 [dm(3) mol(-1)](3) min(-1) for the global fourth-order reversible reaction scheme and E-a = 67,348 J mol(-1) and k(0) = 2.157 x 10(9) min(-1) for the simplified pseudo-first-order irreversible reaction scheme; both in strong agreement with literature data. Furthermore, we designed very efficient conditions for discontinuous and continuous operating mode, both at lab-scale and pilot-scale. The quality of the biodiesel produced from waste cooking sunflower oil is compared with that of biodiesel produced by different kinds of virgin vegetable oils, showing that the former possesses acceptable quality standards (Cetane number = 48 and LHV = 36,600 kJ kg(-1)). Finally, the recycling of wastewater rich in glycerol as a nutrient for mixotrophic microalgae nurturing is discussed, and microalgae growing kinetics are evaluated (k(1) about 0.5 day(-1)), endorsing the possibility of algae extraction each 4-5 days in a semi-continuous operating mode. The experimental results at the pilot scale finally confirm the quality of biodiesel, and the obtained yields for a two-stage process prove the competitiveness of this sustainable process on the global market.

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