Catalysts for Biodiesel Production


The process of homemade biodiesel production is similar to making soap.
Vegetable oils and animal fats are triglycerides, containing glycerin. To turn
vegetable oil into biodiesel fuel you must first eliminate the glycerin. When fat
or oil is separated from glycerin it is considered to be "esterfied".

During both homemade and professional biodiesel production, alcohol (either
methanol or ethanol) is added to displace the glycerin so that it becomes a waste
product. The chemical reaction for this process is triggered by the addition of
lye.

When you purchase Methanol you might notice that it is also marketed under a lot of
different names. Among them are alcohol, wood alcohol, wood naphtha, wood
spirits, methyl hydrate (or "stove fuel"), carbinol, colonial spirits,
Columbian spirits, Manhattan spirits, methylol, methyl hydroxide,
hydroxymethane, monohydroxymethane and pyroxylic spirit. The bottom line is
that all of these nicknames and brands describe one product - methanol.

Be careful when buying something called methylcarbinol as this name can be used to
describe both methanol and ethanol. Check the ingredients to make sure that it is
methanol you are buying and not ethanol. Ethanol is just simply harder to work with
when it comes to creating homemade biodiesel.

Another mistake would also be to substitute Methylated spirits (denatured
alcohol) or isopropyl alcohol (rubbing alcohol) as neither succeeds in creating
biodiesel fuel. You can also buy large amounts of methanol from bulk liquid fuels
distributors who supply to biodiesel production.

It is lye that changes the glycerin into biodiesel fuel (or the fat to soap in the
soap making process. The lye catalyst can be either sodium hydroxide (caustic
soda, NaOH) or potassium hydroxide (KOH). Sodium hydroxide is often easier to
obtain and it's cheaper to use. If you use potassium hydroxide, the process is the
same, but you need to use 1.4 times as much. You can get both NaOH and KOH from craft
stores, soap makers' suppliers and from chemical suppliers. Other chemicals
that are necessary for biodiesel production, such as isopropyl alcohol
(isopropanol) for titration, are available from drug stores and chemical
suppliers.

Of all of the chemicals used in biodiesel production, the lye is the most
dangerous. Don't get it on your skin or in your eyes, don't breathe any fumes, keep
lye away from food, and keep it away from children and pets. Lye also reacts with
aluminum, tin and zinc so don't use any of these metals as a vessel or container for
holding your biodiesel.

By the end of the biodiesel production process the glycerin will be sitting at the
bottom of a container in two floating layers. The bottom glycerin layer will
clearly separated from the biodiesel. The biodiesel at the top can then be removed
or siphoned off and used neat in a diesel car or diesel engineer blended with
petroleum-based diesel fuel.
   
“You’re About To Learn Secrets That Most People Will Never Know About Biodiesel...”

Inside you’ll learn...

  • All you need to know to make your own biodiesel
  • How much biodiesel you can safely use in your diesel engine without change
  • Three surefire ways to destroy your engine using vegetable oil, and how you avoid them
  • How you can actually make money using your own homemade fuel

 

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