The present invention relates to efficiently processing low-cost feedstocks into high-quality biodiesel that meets multiple commercial biodiesel specifications. More particularly, the invention relates to a method of producing biodiesel having a glycerolysis step followed by a stripping step to separate unreacted free fatty acids (FFA) from glycerides wherein the unreacted free fatty acids are recycled back to the glycerolysis step and the glycerides proceed to transesterification.
Biodiesel is a renewable, generally clean-burning, lower carbon, petroleum diesel replacement that enhances independence from imported petroleum, helps reduce greenhouse gas emissions, supports agriculture and rural economies, and creates jobs. While biodiesel provides many benefits, biodiesel production must be efficient in order to compete and remain economically viable.
In order to reduce costs and adapt to changing market conditions, many biodiesel producers seek to use lower cost (and subsequently higher FFA) feedstocks. However, lower cost feedstocks contain a variety of low-level impurities, which can negatively affect biodiesel quality. In other words, it is more difficult to produce high-quality biodiesel when feedstocks containing more contaminants or particulates are used. In general, high FFA feedstocks are difficult to process into biodiesel by base-catalyzed transesterification because the FFAs are converted to soaps, which leads to undesirable processing consequences (e.g., emulsion formation and increased catalyst costs), yield losses, and production rate downturns. Further, it is more difficult to meet the ever-changing biodiesel finished product quality standards when high FFA feedstocks are used. The current practice to ensure product consistency and consumer safety is to regulate biodiesel quality according to various commercial standards, including ASTM D6751, EN 14214, CAN/CGSB 3.524, and numerous customer-specific specifications. The aforementioned specifications require biodiesel to be produced with strict standards for many properties, including flash point, residual alcohol, water and sediment, kinematic viscosity, sulfated ash, oxidation stability, sulfur, copper strip corrosion, cetane number, cloud point, carbon residue, Acid Number, cold soak filterability, monoglycerides, total and free glycerin, phosphorous, 90% distillation temperature, calcium and magnesium, sodium and potassium, particulate contamination, and ester content. The 2012 revision of ASTM D6751 and D6751-12 introduced multiple biodiesel grades with different limits for Cold Soak Filtration test time and monoglyceride content, further increasing the importance of these two properties for customer acceptance of biodiesel. As specifications for biodiesel become more rigorous and demand for lower cost and non-food feedstocks increases, biodiesel producers need improved production processes that enhance production efficiency of new and/or low-cost feedstocks to remain competitive and economically viable.
Chemical inputs like catalysts are an expensive but necessary part of the biodiesel manufacturing process. Optimizing and ultimately reducing the catalysts and other reactants used is a desirable way to make the biodiesel production process more efficient as the cost of manufacturing components is reduced. Moreover, biodiesel manufacture allows some catalysts and other reactants to be recovered and reused, while others are converted into other chemicals and/or unable to be recovered and reused. Therefore, by optimizing and reducing chemical input and recovering output reactants for reuse, biodiesel producers can both reduce the cost and increase the efficiency of the biofuel manufacturing process.
Two methods of enabling the production of biodiesel from lower cost higher FFA feedstocks are FFA stripping and glycerolysis. FFA stripping is a distillation process where FFA is thermally separated from a feedstock, resulting in a lower FFA feedstock stream or source and a higher FFA distillate stream. FFA stripping is often characterized by high temperatures and low pressures where FFA is encouraged to vaporize out of the feed stream. These conditions also encourage vaporization and carryover of monoglycerides (MG) out of the feed stream. MG carryover is undesirable because MG vapors derate or reduce the vapor capacity of the fatty acid distillation column and consequently, demand increased heat input. However, some MG vapor carryover is unavoidable while MG are present in the feedstock due to the similar boiling points of FFA and MG.
Another primary method of FFA reduction is glycerolysis, where FFA is reacted with glycerol, resulting in a product stream characterized by lower FFA. The glycerol reactant can originate from an external source and be dose to the high-FFA feedstock and/or native to the feedstock stream. Available hydroxyl sites may also be present in the form of mono- and diglycerides present in the original feedstock composition. Due to the over-abundance of glycerol in the reactor, the glycerolysis product may typically be characterized by a relatively high MG concentration relative to conventional fat, oil, and grease feedstocks. The artificially high concentration of MG generally renders glycerolysis product streams undesirable as feeds for FFA stripping. Therefore, there is a need for a more efficient and economical biodiesel production process capable of producing quality biodiesel with low cost feedstocks.
One embodiment of the invention relates to a method of refining feedstock in a biodiesel production process. The method comprises introducing the feedstock into a first processing unit to undergo a glycerolysis process and a separation process such as FFA stripping. The output stream from the first processing unit is then introduced to a second processing unit, which another of a glycerolysis process and a separation process. The glycerolysis process converts FFA and glycerol into a glycerolysis product having a mixture of mono-, di-, and tri-glycerides, as well as unreacted FFA and glycerin. The separation process separates the glycerolysis product into a stripped feedstock stream rich in di- and tri-glycerides and a fatty acid distillate stream rich in FFAs and MG. The fatty acid distillate is then introduced to the glycerolysis process to convert the FFAs and MG into di- and tri-glycerides. The method continues as a loop, with the fatty acid distillate recycled upstream to the glycerolysis process until di- and tri-glycerides are produced and separated into the stripped feedstock stream.
Another embodiment of the invention relates to a method of refining feedstock in a biodiesel production process. The method comprises introducing the feedstock stream to a glycerolysis process, which converts the FFA in the feedstock into a glycerolysis product. The glycerolysis product includes at least some unreacted FFA and glycerin, as well as mono-, di-, and tri-glycerides. The glycerolysis product is then introduced to a separation process, such as an FFA stripping process, which separates the glycerolysis product stream into a refined feedstock containing di- and tri-glycerides and a fatty acid distillate containing FFAs and MG. The fatty acid distillate is recycled upstream to the glycerolysis process or introduced to a subsequent glycerolysis process to convert additional FFA and MG into di- and tri-glycerides. In some embodiments, the glycerolysis process is “starved” by introducing less glycerin than required to convert all of the FFAs and MG to di- and tri-glycerides. Starving the glycerolysis reaction helps increase the production of di- and tri-glycerides while minimizing the amount of MG produced.
Another aspect of the invention relates to a method of refining feedstock in a biodiesel production process. The method includes removing free fatty acids from said feedstock in a first free fatty acid stripping process to produce a stripped feedstock and a fatty acid distillate. The stripped feedstock includes di- and tri-glycerides and continues through the process toward transesterification to make biodiesel. The fatty acid distillate includes FFA and MG. The fatty acid distillate is introduced to a glycerolysis process to convert the fatty acid distillate to a glycerolysis product having some unreacted FFAs as well as mono-, di-, and tri-glycerides. The glycerolysis product is then recycled upstream to the fatty acid stripping process or introduced to a subsequent fatty acid stripping process to once again separate the stream into a stripped feedstock and a fatty acid distillate. The stripped feedstock continues toward transesterification and the fatty acid distillate is again introduced to the glycerolysis process to further convert the unreacted FFA and MG into di- and tri-glycerides. In some embodiments, the glycerolysis process is “starved” by introducing less glycerin than required to convert all of the FFAs and monoglycerides to di- and tri-glycerides. Starving the glycerolysis reaction helps increase the production of di- and tri-glycerides while minimizing the amount of MG produced.
The advantages of the technology described may be better understood by referring to the descriptions below with the accompanying drawings. The drawings are not to scale and represent exemplary configurations that depict general principles of the technology, which are not intended as an exhaustive description or as a limitation to the broader aspects of the invention. Dotted lines within the figures represent different embodiments which may be included as part of the process.
The apparatus, devices, systems, products, and methods of the present invention will now be described in detail by reference to various non-limiting embodiments, including the figures, which are exemplary only.
Unless otherwise indicated, all numbers expressing dimensions, capacities, and so forth used in the specification and claims are to be understood as being modified in all instances by the term “about.” “About” will be understood by persons of ordinary skill in the art and will vary to some extent depending on the context in which it is used.
The present invention may be practiced by implementing process steps in different orders than as specifically set forth herein. All references to a “step” may include multiple steps (or substeps) within the meaning of a step. Likewise, all references to “steps” in plural form may be construed as a single process step or various combinations of steps.
The present invention may be practiced by implementing process units in different orders than as specifically set forth herein. All references to a “unit” may include multiple units (or subunits) within the meaning of a unit. Likewise, all references to “units” in plural form may be construed as a single process unit or various combinations of units.
As used in this specification and the appended claims, the singular forms “a,” “an,” and “the” include plural referents unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.
As used in this specification and the appended claims, the term “fats and oils” refers to any material of biological origin, both plant and animal, which is useful as a feedstock for making biodiesel. The feedstock may be in a crude form containing impurities and is considered a “crude feedstock” or “crude oil.” On the other hand, the feedstock may be pretreated using other equipment to remove impurities. The pretreatment process may occur at a biodiesel production facility, at the source location, or both, producing a “pretreated feedstock” or “pretreated oil.” The term “refined feedstock” refers to feedstocks having sufficiently low free fatty acid content to be used directly in transesterification. Refined feedstock may include crude alkyl esters. The term “free fatty acid” refers to aliphatic carboxylic acids having carbon chains with about 6 to about 24 carbon atoms. Free fatty acids may be found in fats and oils between 0 to 100 wt. % and are susceptible to forming esters upon reacting with an alcohol under esterification conditions. The term “ester” refers to organic esters, including mono-esters, di-esters, tri-esters, and more generally multi-esters. The term “biodiesel” describes a fuel comprised of fatty acid alkyl esters of long chain fatty acids derived from fats and oils. The term “alcohol” refers to an organic alcohol, including monohydric alcohols, dihydric alcohols, and polyhydric alcohols generally.
The term “Acid Number” refers to a common measurement of the amount of acid functional groups in the molecules in a sample. It specifically refers to the quantity of strong base (typically KOH) required to titrate the acid functional groups in a sample. Acid Number is conventionally expressed as milligrams of potassium hydroxide per gram of sample.
The term “sulfur” refers to the total quantity of sulfur in liquid fuels defined as mg/kg or parts per million (ppm). The term “unsaponifiables” refers to compounds in oils and fats that do not contain a fatty acid moiety that can be converted to an alkyl ester molecule and therefore can reduce the ester content and/or yield of biodiesel. The term “cold soak filterability tests” refers to test methods included in commercial specifications such as ASTM D7501, CAN/CGSB 3.524 appendix A, and EN 14214 that are used to evaluate the potential cold weather performance of biodiesel and biodiesel blends.
The term “glycerin” or “glycerol” or “free glycerin” refers to the molecule propane-1,2,3-triol (CAS Number 56-81-5). The term “crude glycerin” refers to streams consisting primarily of glycerin and dilute impurities such as methanol, salt, water, and organic matter not glycerin. The term “total glycerin” refers to glycerin present as one of either free glycerin or the glyceryl moiety bound to fatty acids as glycerides.
The methods of the invention can accommodate a wide range of feedstocks. In some embodiments of the invention, nonexclusive examples of feedstock are fats and oils including coconut oil, palm oils, palm kernel oil, cottonseed oil, rapeseed oil, peanut oil, olive oil, linseed oil, babassu oil, tea oil, Chinese tallow oil, olive kernel oil, meadowfoam oil, chaulmoogra oil, coriander oil, canola (rapeseed) oil, soybean oil, corn oil, camelina oil, castor oil, pennycress oil, lard oil, jatropha oil, sunflower oil, algae oils, used cooking oils, bacon grease, choice white grease, yellow grease, brown grease, poultry fat, beef tallow, lard, fish oils or combinations thereof. Additionally, feedstocks may include purified or distilled fats and oils including fatty acid distillates, such as palm fatty acid distillate, and others. Other feedstocks with a significant concentration of FFA, such as greater than about 1 wt. %, may also be suitable, such as acidulated soapstock. In some cases, distillation bottoms may be considered a low-grade crude feedstock, including bottoms from crude biodiesel distillation. Additional oils suitable for biodiesel production may be recovered from grain ethanol processes including corn oil, sorghum oil, wheat oil, and others, depending on the feedstock for the ethanol production process.
The invention relates generally to methods of refining feedstocks in a biodiesel production process by subjecting the feedstock to a glycerolysis process followed by a separation process, such as FFA stripping, before transesterification. Although the invention relates primarily to methods of refining feedstocks, this application also describes additional exemplary steps of a biodiesel production process.
An exemplary method 100 is described with reference to
As shown in
The embodiments shown in
The glycerolysis product may be directed back to pretreated feedstock unit 115 prior to the FFA stripping unit 235, or it may be introduced to the FFA stripping unit 235 directly. The stripped feedstock 245 is separated from the fatty acid distillate 240 during FFA stripping 235, as described above. The first and second stripped feedstocks 245 are moved to refined feedstock 125, which is directed towards transesterification 130 as described in this application. The crude biodiesel 150 produced during transesterification 130 may undergo biodiesel refining 155 as described below. The second fatty acid distillate 240 separated in the FFA stripping unit 235 is then reintroduced to FFA conversion unit 250 to undergo glycerolysis, which converts more FFA and monoglycerides into di- and tri-glycerides and reduces the FFAs in the refined feedstock 125. The fatty acid distillate 240 is continually separated from the stripped feedstock 245 and introduced to the FFA conversion unit 250, then recycled through FFA stripping unit 235 unit to reduce the amount of FFA in the refined feedstock 125. In some embodiments, the stripped feedstock 245 (the products stream) is less than about 5 wt. %, 4 wt. %, 3 wt. %, 2 wt. %, 1 wt. %, 0.5 wt. %, 0.3 wt. % or 0.1 wt. % FFA before entering transesterification as a refined feedstock (125).
A second embodiment shown by the dashed liens in
In some embodiments, the glycerolysis process 250 described above may be optimized to use less glycerin and increase the production of di- and tri-glycerides while minimizing the combined concentrations of FFA and MG in the glycerolysis product. Glycerin optimization includes “starving” the reaction of glycerin, or using less glycerin than required to convert all of the FFAs to glycerides. Glycerolysis proceeds according to the reaction network shown in
There are three forward reactions (R1, R4, and R5) that result in the production of MG. These are the only reactions that require free glycerin (FG) as a reactant. Furthermore, as reaction R1 is the primary reaction for conversion of FFA, glycerolysis reaction conditions are traditionally set to promote reaction R1 to produce as low of FFA content as possible. The subsequent implementation of an FFA stripper in the present invention, however, results in low FFA concentrations in the refined feedstock regardless of the extent of FFA conversion in glycerolysis. Therefore, implementing an FFA stripper in the present invention enables the use of lower glycerin doses that are more optimized for the glycerolysis product stream to be fed to an FFA stripper. This optimized glycerin dose “starves” the reaction of FG and promotes the forward reaction of R2 and R3. In turn, the forward reaction of R2 and R3 promotes production of di- and tri-glycerides. MG and unreacted FFA are separated in step 235 and then recycled back into glycerolysis, where they have another opportunity to react with glycerin to form higher molecular weight (di- and tri-) glycerides. The FFA refining process 120 of the present invention allows for less glycerin to be used during glycerolysis because it is not necessary to react all of the FFA in a single glycerolysis process 250.
Once the feedstock has been pretreated 110 and refined 120, it enters the transesterification process 130 and then the biodiesel refining process 155. There are several processes that may be used to produce biodiesel from oils and fats, including base-catalyzed transesterification, acid-catalyzed transesterification, and enzymatic transesterification.
In one embodiment, after the crude biodiesel 150 and crude glycerin 135 have been separated in unit 275, crude glycerin 135 may be treated with a suitable acid from an acid dilution vessel 285 to neutralize the residual catalyst and crude biodiesel 150 can be subjected to a water wash in unit 295 to remove glycerin, salts, and soaps. The separated crude glycerin 135 may be subjected to additional purification in an evaporation step to remove any remaining alcohol. One such distillation and drying step is performed in unit 290. The glycerin alcohol stripper 290 removes alcohol and water, which is collected in a wet alcohol unit 315. Removal of alcohol and water results in a glycerin product consisting of approximately 78 to about 98% pure glycerin. This glycerin 145 can be further refined to a purity of about 99% or higher using additional processing techniques to render the glycerin product suitable for use in high purity applications, such as cosmetics or pharmaceuticals. Alternatively, the glycerin 145 may be used as a reactant for glycerolysis (shown by the dashed line) when the FFA conversion 250 process is glycerolysis.
Crude biodiesel 150 leaving the phase separation unit 275 will still include impurities and therefore must be purified in one or more unit operations. The order and number of these operations may vary depending on crude feedstock properties, pretreatment process, transesterification process, and economic feasibility. However, the combination of an appropriate biodiesel refining process 155 with an appropriate feedstock pretreatment 110 and FFA refining 120 process will provide a purified biodiesel 160 that meets commercial specifications regardless of the initial feedstock properties.
The invention is illustrated in detail below with reference to the example, but without restricting it to them.
A high-FFA feedstock blend was prepared from about 79 wt. % used cooking oil (UCO) and about 21 wt. % fatty acid distillate (FAD). A summary of the key properties of the high-FFA feedstock blend is shown below in Error! Reference source not found. Refined glycerin was produced by distilling crude glycerin from the production of biodiesel in a wiped film evaporator at about 180° C. and 16 mbar. The composition of the refined glycerin is shown in Error! Reference source not found. The effect of glycerin dose on glycerolysis performance was evaluated by dosing the high-FFA feedstock blend with refined glycerin at dose rates ranging from 0 to 0.31 molar equivalents to the total fatty acids present in the high-FFA feedstock blend (MEq-TFA). The dose rate of glycerin was determined on a MEq-TFA basis according to the following equation:
where:
The glycerin-dosed feedstock was then reacted in a lab-scale stirred-batch reactor at conditions of 230° C. and 300 mbar for about 4 hours. A block flow diagram for the lab-scale reactor system used for this study is shown in
<2%
<1%
After conducting the glycerolysis experiments as described above, the glycerolysis product composition was analyzed for FFA and glycerides to determine the effect of the glycerolysis treatment. The results of these analyses are shown below in Error! Reference source not found. Interestingly, there was a reduction of 6.7 wt. % in FFA even when no glycerin was added to the reactor. As the dose rate of refined glycerin was increased, the FFA of the glycerolysis product decreased, as shown in
Traditionally, glycerolysis is optimized to produce a feedstock characterized by a low concentration of FFA. In the present invention, however, where glycerolysis is optimized to feed FFA distillation, the latent heat of the glycerolysis product must also be considered.
As a result of the high degree of variability in the identity and quantity of impurities found in feedstocks for biodiesel, particularly low-cost crude feedstocks, a number of process steps as disclosed in the embodiments of the invention may be employed as disclosed to convert highly impure feedstock into high-quality, fully-acceptable biodiesel. These various embodiments are described in sufficient detail to enable one of ordinary skill in the art to practice the invention, and it is to be understood that modifications to the various disclosed embodiments may be made by a skilled artisan.
Where methods and steps described above indicate certain events occurring in certain order, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that the ordering of certain steps may be modified and that such modifications are in accordance with the principles of the invention. Additionally, certain steps may be performed concurrently in a parallel process when possible, as well as performed sequentially.
All publications, patents, and patent applications cited in this specification are incorporated by reference in their entirety as if each publication, patent, or patent application were specifically and individually put forth in this application.
The embodiments, variations, and figures described above indicate the utility and versatility of the present invention. Other embodiments that do not provide all of the features and advantages set forth in this application may also be utilized without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. Such modifications and variations are considered to be within the scope of the principles of the invention defined by the claims.
This application is based upon U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 63/401,012 filed Aug. 25, 2022, the complete disclosure of which is hereby expressly incorporated by this reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63401012 | Aug 2022 | US |