4.3 Article

Infrared Spectroscopy and Multivariate Calibration for Quantification of Soybean Oil as Adulterant in Biodiesel Fuels

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN OIL CHEMISTS SOCIETY
Volume 92, Issue 6, Pages 777-782

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1007/s11746-015-2656-x

Keywords

Biodiesel; Infrared spectroscopy; Multivariate calibration

Funding

  1. FAPEMIG-Research Support Foundation of Minas Gerais [FAPEMIG-17.014/11]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This work quantifies the adulteration of ethyl and methyl soybean biodiesels/diesel (B5) blended with soybean oil using mid-infrared spectroscopy associated with multivariate calibration. The models constructed by the method of partial least squares (PLS) presented low values of root-mean-square error of prediction 0.22 % (w/w) and 0.26 % (w/w), respectively, for models containing ethyl and methyl soybean biodiesel. Along with the parameters of error, accuracy was evaluated by the use of an elliptical joint confidence region (EJCR). The EJCR for the both PLS models showed there was no significant difference between the prepared concentration values and PLS predicted concentration values, and that there was no evidence of bias within the 95 % confidence level. The PLS models showed excellent correlation in the prediction set (R = 0.999) and did not present systematic errors according to the ASTM E1655 standard. Therefore, the models presented excellent performance in quantifying soybean oil as an adulterant in B5 blends, in concentrations within the range 1.00-30.00 % (w/w). The proposed methodology showed itself to be efficient for quality control of B5 contaminated with vegetable oil.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available