Sulfonated SnO2nanocatalysts: Via a self-propagating combustion method for esterification of palm fatty acid distillate

Nabihah-Fauzi, N. and Asikin-Mijan, N. and Ibrahim, M.L. and Hashim, H. and Yusup, S. and Taufiq-Yap, Y.H. and Mastuli, M.S. (2020) Sulfonated SnO2nanocatalysts: Via a self-propagating combustion method for esterification of palm fatty acid distillate. RSC Advances, 10 (49). pp. 29187-29201.

Full text not available from this repository.
Official URL: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2....

Abstract

Biodiesel derived from palm fatty acid distillate (PFAD) was produced via catalytic esterification using sulfonated tin oxide (HSO3-/SnO2) as the superacid solid catalyst. In this work, the SnO2 catalyst was synthesised by the self-propagating combustion (SPC) method, and activated using chlorosulfonic acid. The SPC method was able to produce nano-sized particles with homogenous size and shape that were anchored with many HSO3- ions, resulting in more exceptional acid properties that effectively esterified the PFAD feedstock into FAMEs (fatty acid methyl esters). Several studies based on metal oxide-based catalysts were also included for comparison. Under the optimised conditions of 9�:�1 (methanol-to-PFAD molar ratio), 4 wt (catalyst loading), 100 °C (reaction temperature) and 3 h (reaction time), the FFA conversion and FAME yield were 98.9 and 93.8, respectively. Besides, the sulfonated SnO2-spc catalyst can be reused in up to five consecutive cycles with an acceptable esterification performance and minimal sulfur leaching. It is worth mentioning that the SPC method is a greener and simpler technique to obtain the nanocatalysts. Overall, the production of FAME from low value, cheaper, abundant, and non-edible PFAD feedstock, assisted by a non-transition metal oxide of sulfonated SnO2 catalyst, could reduce the cost of biodiesel production. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.

Item Type: Article
Impact Factor: cited By 6
Uncontrolled Keywords: Biodiesel; Combustion; Esters; Feedstocks; Molar ratio; Nanocatalysts; Particle size; Tin oxides; Transition metal oxides; Transition metals, Biodiesel production; Catalytic esterification; Fatty acid methyl ester; Nano-sized particles; Optimised conditions; Palm fatty acid distillate; Reaction temperature; Self-propagating combustion, Fatty acids
Depositing User: Ms Sharifah Fahimah Saiyed Yeop
Date Deposited: 25 Mar 2022 03:23
Last Modified: 25 Mar 2022 03:23
URI: http://scholars.utp.edu.my/id/eprint/30063

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item