4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Triacylglyceride Thermal Cracking: Pathways to Cyclic Hydrocarbons

Journal

ENERGY & FUELS
Volume 26, Issue 1, Pages 672-685

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ef200953d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. North Dakota Agricultural Production Utilization Commission
  2. North Dakota State Board of Agricultural Research
  3. North Dakota Soybean Council
  4. National Science Foundation [EPS-081442, EPS-0447679]
  5. EPSCoR
  6. Office Of The Director [0814442] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Thermal cracking of triacylglyceride (TG) oils results in complex mixtures, containing nearly 20% cyclic hydrocarbons, which can be further processed into middle-distillate transportation fuels and byproduct chemicals. The occurrence patterns of cyclic products obtained via the thermal cracking of several TG feedstocks, such as canola and soybean oils, as well as triolein and tristearin (conducted at 430-440 degrees C in the absence of catalysts under vacuum), were investigated to probe possible formation mechanisms. Detailed gas chromatographic characterization furnished full molar homology/molecular size and partial isomeric profiles for cyclopentanes, cyclopentenes, cyclohexanes, cyclohexenes, aromatics, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). It was found that the data were inconsistent with previously proposed mechanisms involving the Diels-Alder reaction as a single pathway. An alternate mechanism was proposed and supported with experimental evidence based on the intramolecular cyclization of alkenyl and alkadienyl radicals formed as a result of TG cracking. The product homology profiles corroborate the proposed mechanism and show the depletion of medium-size alkenes coupled with the accumulation of corresponding monocyclic hydrocarbons (those with the matching number of carbon atoms). Similarly, the product mixtures were depleted of long-chain alkyl-substituted monocyclic hydrocarbons because of the formation of the corresponding PAH-Is as long as sufficient time is available. Entropy appears to determine the type and size of cyclic hydrocarbons formed.

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