Recycling, Vol. 10, Pages 70: Environmental Pollution Mitigation: The Chemical Transformation of Residual Frying Oil into Biodiesel


Recycling, Vol. 10, Pages 70: Environmental Pollution Mitigation: The Chemical Transformation of Residual Frying Oil into Biodiesel

Recycling doi: 10.3390/recycling10020070

Authors:
Yolanda C. Pérez-Luna
Paola T. Vázquez-Villegas
Roberto Berrones-Hernández
Yazmin Sánchez-Roque
Sergio Saldaña-Trinidad
Miguel A. Canseco-Pérez
Elvia G. Gómez-Vázquez
Anayancy Lam-Gutiérrez
Ludwi Rodríguez-Hernández

Currently, residual frying oil has three purposes: it is used again in the preparation of fried foods, mixed with new vegetable oil, which can cause cardiovascular disease in the consumer; it is collected by government institutions, without having an exclusive use; or it is thrown into the drain, causing serious pollution problems to water resources. An alternative is to transform it into biodiesel, through transesterification with methanol, to be used in internal combustion engines, biodiesel-diesel mixtures of 10:90, 15:85 and 20:80 (v/v), according to international regulations in such a way that, in the combustion process, less CO2 and greenhouse gas emissions are generated. Residual frying oil served as raw material, which was collected, mixed and homogenized to evaluate physicochemical properties before transformation. The biodiesel generated had a density of 0.886 g L−1, an acidity of 0.516%, a viscosity of 7.535 mm2 s−1, a flash point of 166.8 °C and an oxidative stability of 49 days at 25 °C. Additionally, the content of functional groups characteristic of biodiesel formation was evaluated by Infrared Spectroscopy. The Biodiesel obtained is of good quality for use in internal combustion engines and agricultural machinery, thus validating its continuous production and complying with the standard values of international regulations.



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