Title: Randall von Wedel, Ph'D'
1-
- Randall von Wedel, Ph.D.
- BioSolar /CytoCulture International Inc.
- Rvwedel_at_gmail.com
- CalACT Monterey, CA November 6, 2008
2Biodiesel benefitsgoing green
- A diesel displacement fuel made from plant oils,
animal fats or recycled cooking oils through a
chemical process to remove glycerin and yield
methyl esters optimized for combustion in modern
diesel engines e.g., common rail - Renewable, agriculturally produced replacement
fuel to displace imported petroleum with local
domestic biofuel - Biodiesel itself is non-toxic, non-flammable and
non-volatile, making it safe to handle store as
B99/B100 - Biodiesel contains very low sulfur and no
aromatics - In US, often blended by big fleets to 20 (B20)
to achieve significant reductions in PM and
criteria air emissions - 17 GHG reduction in CO2 emissions by life cycle
analysis - EPACT credits for city-county fleets compliance
with RFS
3Other incentives to use Biodiesel
- Public support of reduced exhaust smoke and odors
in blends of 20 or higher - Proactive move to reduce GHGs and climate change
- Offset carbon footprint of electric power
generation - Flexible fuel for fleets in blends Easily
reversible - Relatively low cost (similar to ULSD), no capital
investments in infrastructure as drop in fuel - Obvious solution for older diesel engines that
may not be amenable to modern after-treatment
retrofits - Lower impact of accidental spills or leaks
4Challenges for Biodiesel Today
- Availability to small rural transit fleets in
remote areas - Education of local transit agencies and
distributors - Perception issues regarding warranties and
operations - Pricing of biodiesel in more remote areas
- Biodiesel fuel quality issues when improperly
stored - Feedstock (raw material) availability keeping up
with demand for biodiesel across the
statedisplacing soy biodiesel with locally
produced, sustainable biodiesel made from
recycled oil, animal fats and new oil crops
5Biodiesel Bus Chassis Dynamometer Testing
- B20 vs. conventional diesel fuel
- 2 in-use buses tested (40,000 lb GVWR)
- City Suburban Heavy Vehicle Cycle (CSHVC) at
35,000 lb inertia - Cummins ISM 2000 Engine No EGR
- Fuel economy reduction ? 3
- Emission reductions (g/mile basis)
- PM ? 18
- HC ? 29
- CO ? 24
- NOx ? 4
- statistical confidence gt 99
- Data from Dr. Robert McCormick, NREL
6ENGINE C
ENGINE B
ENGINE A
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8Particulate Traps and Oxidative Catalysts
- After treatment reduces PM, CO and HC by 50-90
- Retrofitted to most diesel buses, but not to
2-stroke and some older engines (or use high
blend biodiesel) - Biodiesel is compatible with most devices CARB
certified traps/filters now operating in CA for
B20 - Excellent B20 results in SF vehicles equipped
with the Clearaire Longview PM / NOx reduction
system - B20 increases PM reduction by 62 in oxidative
catalysts (NREL study 2005) so improved
performance - B20 extends longevity of traps, lower maintenance
9Using Biodiesel Lowers Greenhouse Gas Emissions
and Carbon Footprint of Fleet Vehicles
- Closed Carbon Cycle CO2 of engine emission can
be taken up by oil crops in the following season - 78 life cycle reduction in CO2 from crop to
tailpipe Midwest B100 translates to about 12-15
GHG reduction for B20 in California, FL - Energy Balance 3.5 to 1 for soy, 4.6 1 for
animal fats, 71 for recycled cooking oil - Besides reducing idling, retiring old trucks,
improving engine efficiencies, fleet have few
options to reduce GHGs
10San Francisco MUNI B20 Buses
- 520 buses in the City consume 6.2 m gallons
B20/yr, or about 1.25 m gallons of B100 per year
(1 rail car per wk) - 86 of those buses are new true hybrid diesel
electric - Most of the regular buses equipped with LongView
NOx / PM reduction after treatment B20 works
fine - Program initiated as 6 month pilot study per
Mayors Executive order in 2006 full compliance
all B20 now for over a year without ANY vehicle
problems - Lessons learned B20 works, but important to have
good fuel quality clean tanks before
implementation
11Basic Biodiesel Reaction
Liquid Catalyst 1 kg (Na or K Hydroxide)
Combining
Yields
- Degummed vegetable oil, used cooking oil or
animal fat - (100 kg)
-
- Methanol
- (12 kg)
Biodiesel (95 kg) Glycerin (11 kg)
12Transesterification Reaction (basic)
- H O
- ? ??
- H - C - O - C - CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2
CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH3 - ?
- ? O
- ? ??
- H - C - O - C - (CH2)7 -CH CH(CH2)7
CH3 3 H3 - C -OH ---------------? - ?
-OH - ? O Methanol
Catalyst - ? ??
- H - C - O - C - (CH2)7 -CH CHCH2 CH
CH(CH2)4 CH3 - ?
- H
-
-
- Vegetable Oil or Animal Fat Triglyceride
- 80 US Biodiesel today is still made from Soybean
oil, balance is animal fat, canola, cooking
oil -
13Transesterification reaction releases methyl
esters from glycerin
- H O
- ? ??
- H - C - OH CH3 - O - C - (CH2)16 CH3
- ?
- ? Methyl Stearate (saturated ester)
- ? O
- ? ??
- H - C - OH CH3 - O - C - (CH2)7 -CH
CH(CH2)7 CH3 - ?
- ? Methyl Oleate
(mono-unsaturated ester) - ? O
- ? ??
- H - C - OH CH3
- O - C - (CH2)7 -CH CHCH2 CH CH(CH2)4 CH3 - ?
- H Methyl Linoleate (di-unsaturated
ester) -
- Glycerin
- Range of Biodiesel Methyl Esters
-
Process Control and Batch Testing is Essential
14Mono di glycerides result from incomplete
transesterification
-
- H O
- ? ??
- H - C - O - C - CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CHCH CH2
CH2 CH2 CH2 CH CH CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH3 - ?
- ?
- ?
- H - C - O - H
- ?
- ?
- ?
- H - C - O - H
- ?
- H Monoglyceride (Linoleic
182) -
Free fatty acids in oxidized feedstock oil
contribute to incomplete conversion of oil to
esters
15Free fatty acids and polymers result from
oxidation cross linking of unsaturated chains
-
- O
- ??
- - O - C - CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CHCH CH2 CH2
CH2 CH2 CH CH CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH3 - O
O
O - ??
/ \ /
\ - - O - C - CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH -- CH C H2
CH2 CH2 CH2 CH --CH CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH3 -
- Hydroperoxides form by oxidation
of double bonds - Breakdown to smaller fatty acids or cross-link to
form polymers - Higher free fatty acids (rancid oil) means lower
quality biodiesel -
-
-
16Important Biodiesel Parameters
- Complete conversion avoid partially reacted
fuel! - High oxidation stability avoid unwanted
reactions - Removal of glycerin residues accumulate in
engine - Removal of catalyst destroys gaskets and seals
- Removal of residual carbon polymers from
oxidation - Keep low acid number avoid oxidized fuel
- New pending assay to test for potential
precipitations - Insured through ASTM D 6751 specs
17ASTM D 6751 2008 Feedstock Neutral
- Property Test Method Limits Units
-
- Calcium Magnesium EN 14538 5
max ppm (ug/g) - Flash Point D 93 130 min.
degrees C - Water Sediment D 2709 (4176)
0.05 max. volume - Kin. Viscosity, 40C D 445
1.9 - 6.0 mm²/sec. - Sulfated Ash D 874
0.02 max. mass - Sulfur S15 D 5453 0.0015
max (15) mass (ppm) - Copper Corrosion D 130 No. 3
max. - Cetane number D 613 47 min.
- Cloud Point D 2500
Report degrees C - Carbon Residue D 4530 0.05
max. mass - Acid Number D 664 0.50 max.
mg KOH/g - Free Glycerin D 6854 0.020
mass - Total Glycerin D 6854 0.240
mass - Phosphorous content D 4951 0.001
max mass - Distillation, T90 AET D 1160 360 max
degrees C - Na/K, combined EN 14538
5 max ppm (ug/g) - Oxidation Stability EN 14112
3 min hours
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19ASTM D6751 Highlights for QA protocol
- Total glycerin test for incomplete conversion
- (mono, di and triglcyeride residues in fuel)
- Oxidation stability oxidation intermediates
- Acid number fatty acids from oxidation
- Carbon residues polymers from oxidized chains
- ASTM and EU specs are likely to tighten for
- P, Na, K, Ca, Mg oxidation stability
- NEW cold soak filter assay CSFA pending ASTM
approval as operational test for precipitations - Recommend also monitoring KF Moisture
20Fuel Quality Control A Mindset at 3 Levels from
Plant to Fleet
- Production at the plant feedstock to fuel
- BQ 9000 or other rigorous QA program
- ASTM 6751 specs and certification
- Distribution, storage, blending and handling
- BQ 9000 or other rigorous QA program
- Protocols, documentation, monitoring
- Consumer storage, dispensing use
- Protocols, documentation, monitoring
21Biodiesel Fuel SpecificationsIts all about
Quality Control
- Most or all problems associated with biodiesel
use are due to fuel quality issues, not to the
biodiesel per se - Quality control problems largely a result of a
rapidly growing industry, inexperience and lack
of diligence. - The problems are NOT caused by inadequate
specifications or the lack of proper protocols,
from the plant to the distributor to the user - Fleet managers can set up their own Quality
Assurance programs and set requirements for their
fuel vendors to do the samefrom driver training
to fuel testing
22Common Problems with Biodiesel in Transit
Storage
- Biodiesel and blends suffer from condensation
water and contamination from fuel deliveries - Bacterial growth (not algae) in water layer
will deteriorate the fuel, generate acids and
precipitations - Acids caused by bacterial biodegradation of fuel
(short free fatty acids) can damage engine
components - Anaerobic conditions in damp tanks promote
sulfate reduction forming traces of corrosive
sulfuric acid - Older tanks or tanks accidentally contaminated
with infected, deteriorated diesel fuel can
infect biodiesel
23www.biodiesel.org
24Fuel Problems Associated with Increasingly Out
of Spec Biodiesel
- Residues in storage tanks, filters and lines
- Clogged filters can stop vehicles on road
- Dissolved contaminants foul injectors
- Coking of injectors and varnish on valves
- Rough engine operation, smoke, wear
- Catalyst, methanol ruin fuel injection pump
- Crankcase oil deterioration, polymerization
- Long term or catastrophic engine damage
25Some problems get caught
- Sediments, bacterial slime,
- precipitates and free water
- can be trapped by filters
- along with any insoluble
- impurities associated with
- the fuel
- Butdissolved contaminants
- acids that can damage engines
- pass through the filters
26Field Test Kit Developed for checking Biodiesel
B100 Quality pHLip Test
- A Quick Check in the field for detecting traces
of catalyst, mono/di/triglycerides, soaps, acids
and oxidized (aged) fuel hydroxyesters,
peroxides - 10 min test Simply add B100 to test vial, mix by
flipping let the fuel float to create two
phases - Visual indication only but quantitative
capability - Unrelated to ASTM yet surprisingly sensitive for
dissolved contaminants Now a QC protocol test - Intended to alert a consumer or operator as a
firewall, then they can request a formal lab
test -
27pHLip Test Kit Concepts
- Extraction of catalyst or acid from fuel to
aqueous pH indicator elicits color change from
neutral red color - Soluble contaminants in biodiesel can be
- gtExtracted into the aqueous phase
- (fatty acid soaps) as visible
turbidity - gtConcentrated at water-fuel interface
- (glycerides, sterols, oxidized esters)
Lens Effect Signal Amplification - gtHydrated in the fuel as visible turbidity
- (mono, di triglycerides fatty acids,
oxidized) - Endorsed and distributed by the National
Biodiesel Board
28Detection of catalyst contamination from poorly
washed biodiesel fuels
Clear Bright Reference Fuel
Contaminated Biodiesel samples become turbid
? Mirror Finish
Alkaline pH creates purple color soaps cause
turbidity
Neutral pH Indicator
www.allthingsbiodiesel.com
29Aging Oxidized B100 ExamplesRelative to Fresh
Bright Reference Fuel
Fresh
Bright
Haze
Smoke
Mirror
?Residues
Neutral pH
Acidic
30Detecting near-spec and off-spec fueltop vs.
bottom of rail car tank of B100
Bright Bright B100 reference
Top Sample
Bottom Sample
? Mirror reflection
? Glycerides
0.76 Monoglycerides, 0.38 Diglycerides, 0.62
Triglycerides 0.31 Total Glycerin in composite
of Top and Bottom samples
31Monitoring Biodiesel Quality for Fleet Deliveries
by Truck/Rail to FL Bus Fleet
Bus Fleet Managers Testing B99 on delivery
32 Biodiesel Quality Status Report (BQSR)
Typical B100 imported to CA now, similar to NREL
2007 Survey average
33Out-of-spec, incompletely reacted B100
Turbid fuel layer
Top
Middle
Bottom
Note clear and bright B100 samples vs. Turbid
fuel layer in pHLip Tests
34Oxidized (ruined) ASTM spec B100
35Biodiesel Quality Status Report 2008
Excellent quality biodiesel by rail 85 Soy /
15 animal fat B100
36Debunking myths about biodiesel
- Engine conversion needed. No, its a drop in
fuel blended with ULSD. Most big fleets use B20
blend - Biodiesel raises NOx emissions No, B20 blends
proved to be NOx Neutral on emissions per 2007
NREL study - Only pure soy biodiesel is really good quality.
No, many feedstock result in excellent biodiesel,
including animal fat, recycled cooking oil
palm. Process is what varies competence/diligenc
e in quality control - Cold flow Biodiesel gels. Not a problem for B20
made from most feedstock, specify pour
point/cloud point - Biodiesel causes increase in food prices. No,
most grains are not feedstock. Focus on
industrial crop oils.
37Research on US feedstock options
- Animal fat methyl ester blended into soy
biodiesel - Chicken fat, beef tallow, high grade pork fat
- Recycled cooking oil biodiesel all around the
country - Trap grease / brown grease pilot studies in CA,
PA - Canola and Winter Rapeseed in Northwest
- Mustard, Canola Camelina in Western states
- Cotton seed oil in Texas and Southwest
- Safflower, Sunflower and high oil Mustard in CA
- Sunflower and Jatropha in Florida (test plots)
- Imports Palm oil biodiesel (mostly for cruise
ships)
38Sustainability now a B100 spec Examples of
evolving GHG policies
- Utility fleets developing Corporate Biofuel
Policies on both coasts already implemented at
FPL and enforced - Dupont set precedent in formalizing Sustainable
Best Practices as high level management corporate
policy - New CA Renewable Fuel Standard will set specific
criteria for sustainable biofuels, land use
changes, etc. - US/EU biofuel policies include mandatory 35 net
reduction in green house gases (GHG) for biofuels - Tesco in UK (supermarket chain throughout UK, EU)
had a PR setback when GreenPeace revealed B50
fleet was using imported Indonesian palm oil
biodiesel
39Food (feed) vs. biofuel debate
- On going arguments stemming from papers early
2008 pointing out land use changes, net energy
GHG emission reductions good bad cultivation
practices - Right now, 16 of total soybean oil in US (2.2 b
lbs) is used to produce biodiesel, about 10 is
exported as oil - Soybean is grown primarily as high protein animal
feed, same as corn or other feed grains - 2 lbs grain/lb chicken 4 lbs grain/lb pork, 6
lbs/lb beef - Oil is a co-product of soybean meal production
for feed - Biofuels accounted for nearly half the world
demand increase, but only 7 of total vegetable
oil consumed, while a cut back in subsidies
reduced oil production
40Food (feed) price increases
- Primary driver for increased food and grain
prices is rising demand for meat, particularly
China, India, Asia - Wheat consumption exceeded production in 7 of 8
yrs - Droughts and dropping water tables sharply cut
back grain production in China, Australia, and
Northwest - Price of petroleum fuel pushed up costs of
transport, fertilizers, herbicides, insecticides
and processing - Aggressive commodity markets domestic hoarding
contributed to sharp spikes in rice, wheat and
grains - For yellow corn, the net gain in US production
acreage cant meet the demand world wide for
animal feed
41Straining world fuel, food and water
- Population increases have been anticipated.China
India represent over a third of the world
inhabitants - Migration from rural areas to crowded cities 44
now but expecting 66 by 2030 resource
intensive shift - Surge in middle classand their meat consumption,
with 3 x increase in meat eaten in China since
1983 - India lagging, but expected to follow China, with
huge spikes in demand for food, fuel and
commodities - Will create 10 New York cities in the next 10
years, with 30,000 new skyscrapers in China alone - Water tables are dropping, global warming
reducing yields and climate changes affecting
crops world wide
42Biofuel vs. food debate Pendulum swinging back
to center
- Biofuels, like other products, can be produced
the right way vs. the wrong way, or compare to
petroleum - Per Merril Lynch analysis, without biofuel
programs, price of oil would be 13/BBL higher
than it is now, so biofuels are saving 65
billion in foreign oil payments - EU US Ag Commissions recently reaffirmed
positive impacts GHG reduction benefits of
biofuel policies - Shift to less polluting, more efficient modes of
transport - Promote CO2 reduction policies and encourage
biofuels - Biofuel are most immediately feasible way to
lower CO2
43Biodiesel feedstock evolution diversified fuel
sources
- Early development, then commercialization in
US/EU - Soybean (US), Rapeseed (EU) recycled cooking
oil - Recent trends in US (2007 -2008)
- Transition from pure soy blends with animal fat
FAME - Regional plants using local feedstock Chicken
fat, beef tallow, pork fat, and recycled cooking
oil (CA) - Next 3-5 years More local feedstock, recycled
oils, trap grease and imported palm oil (summer),
Jatropha oil - Locally grown crop oils Sunflower, Canola,
Safflower - Imported tropical oils Palm (current) then
Jatropha
44Tropical crop oils are promising feedstock for
biodieseland fleets
- Most new crop oils should make high spec
biodiesel provided the oil is in good condition
properly degummed, low in oxidation low in free
fatty acids - Oxidation issues require special precautions
- Cold flow properties are encouraging for Jatropha
but not for palm or coconut blends of the two
are likely - Specifications could tighten for future engines
oxidation stability, trace ions (P, K, Na,
Mg, Ca) - Sustainability issues and land use changes
critical
45Tropical oil plantations/groves
Jatropha at FL test plot
African Red Palm, Central America
46National Biodiesel Expo Conference San
Francisco February 1-4, 2009
www.biodiesel.org
Jatropha fruit opened 3 oil seeds with over 40
oil by weight
Jatropha fruit ripening on tree