Biodiesel Production From Oleic Acid Using Biomass-Derived Sulfonated Orange Peel Catalyst

  • Kumawat M
  • Rokhum S
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Abstract

Biodiesel, as an alternative fuel for petroleum-based fuel, has recently acquired significant attention. The current study focused on using biowaste to produce catalysts for low-cost biodiesel manufacturing. Orange peels (OP) were used to make carbon-based solid acid catalysts with sulfonic acid group (–SO 3 H) density of 1.96 mmol g −1 via a “one-pot” carbonization-sulfonation treatment. Under the optimized reaction conditions (15:1 MeOH to oleic acid molar ratio, 7 wt.% catalyst loading w.r.t oleic acid, 80°C reaction temperature, 60 min reaction time), 96.51 ± 0.4% conversion of oleic acid to methyl oleate (a biodiesel component) was obtained. The catalyst displayed high recyclability and stability on repeated reuse, with a negligible decrease in biodiesel conversion up to 5 catalytic cycles.

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Kumawat, M. K., & Rokhum, S. L. (2022). Biodiesel Production From Oleic Acid Using Biomass-Derived Sulfonated Orange Peel Catalyst. Frontiers in Catalysis, 2. https://doi.org/10.3389/fctls.2022.914670

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