4.7 Article

Biodiesel classification by base stock type (vegetable oil) using near infrared spectroscopy data

Journal

ANALYTICA CHIMICA ACTA
Volume 689, Issue 2, Pages 190-197

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.aca.2011.01.041

Keywords

Petroleum (fossil) fuel; Vegetable (plant) oil; Biofuel (biodiesel, bioethanol, ethanol-gasoline fuel); Vibrational spectroscopy (infrared, near-infrared, and Raman); Artificial neural networks; Support vector machines

Funding

  1. ITERA International Group of companies

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The use of biofuels, such as bioethanol or biodiesel, has rapidly increased in the last few years. Near infrared (near-IR, NIR, or NIRS) spectroscopy (>4000 cm(-1)) has previously been reported as a cheap and fast alternative for biodiesel quality control when compared with infrared, Raman, or nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) methods; in addition, NIR can easily be done in real time (on-line). In this proof-of-principle paper, we attempt to find a correlation between the near infrared spectrum of a biodiesel sample and its base stock. This correlation is used to classify fuel samples into 10 groups according to their origin (vegetable oil): sunflower, coconut, palm, soy/soya, cottonseed, castor, Jatropha, etc. Principal component analysis (PCA) is used for outlier detection and dimensionality reduction of the NIR spectral data. Four different multivariate data analysis techniques are used to solve the classification problem, including regularized discriminant analysis (RDA), partial least squares method/projection on latent structures (PLS-DA), K-nearest neighbors (KNN) technique, and support vector machines (SVMs). Classifying biodiesel by feedstock (base stock) type can be successfully solved with modern machine learning techniques and NIR spectroscopy data. KNN and SVM methods were found to be highly effective for biodiesel classification by feedstock oil type. A classification error (E) of less than 5% can be reached using an SVM-based approach. If computational time is an important consideration, the KNN technique (E=6.2%) can be recommended for practical (industrial) implementation. Comparison with gasoline and motor oil data shows the relative simplicity of this methodology for biodiesel classification. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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