Spectroscopic analysis of structural transformation in biodiesel degradation

The vegetable oil, fats and their biodiesel suffer with the drawback of deterioration of its quality during long term storage unlike petroleum diesel. The oxidation and thermal stability of two biodiesels of different origins, viz. palm oil derived biodiesel and used cooking oil based biodiesel were...

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Main Authors: Saifuddin, N., Refal, H.
Format: Article
Language:en_US
Published: 2017
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spelling my.uniten.dspace-60282018-02-21T01:04:32Z Spectroscopic analysis of structural transformation in biodiesel degradation Saifuddin, N. Refal, H. The vegetable oil, fats and their biodiesel suffer with the drawback of deterioration of its quality during long term storage unlike petroleum diesel. The oxidation and thermal stability of two biodiesels of different origins, viz. palm oil derived biodiesel and used cooking oil based biodiesel were analyzed. The structural transformation of Fatty Acid Methyl Ester (FAME) of the biodiesels was analyzed by an infrared spectrometer and an ultraviolet absorption spectrometer. The infrared spectra of the samples were recorded by FTIR spectroscopy. The absorbance values of the spectrum bands were observed and it was determined that some of the chemical groups of oxidized oils caused changes in absorbance. The spectroscopic data of degraded biodiesel suggested oxidative polymerization. The results demonstrated that the oxidation behavior of biodiesels of different origins was closely related to the composition and distribution of FAMEs. Higher concentration of unsaturated FAME with multi-double bonds exhibited poorer oxidation resistance. In this study, in order to increase the stability of biodiesel, against oxidation process during the storage and distribution, different percentages (0.02, 0.05, 0.1 and 0.2% (w/v), respectively) of caffeic acid, were added as natural antioxidants. The antioxidant effect increased with concentration up to an optimal level. Above the optimal level, the increase in antioxidant effect with its concentration was relatively small. © Maxwell Scientific Organization, 2014. 2017-12-08T08:12:13Z 2017-12-08T08:12:13Z 2014 Article https://pure.uniten.edu.my/en/publications/spectroscopic-analysis-of-structural-transformation-in-biodiesel- en_US Spectroscopic analysis of structural transformation in biodiesel degradation. Research Journal of Applied Sciences, Engineering and Technology, 8(9), 1149-1159
institution Universiti Tenaga Nasional
building UNITEN Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Tenaga Nasional
content_source UNITEN Institutional Repository
url_provider http://dspace.uniten.edu.my/
language en_US
description The vegetable oil, fats and their biodiesel suffer with the drawback of deterioration of its quality during long term storage unlike petroleum diesel. The oxidation and thermal stability of two biodiesels of different origins, viz. palm oil derived biodiesel and used cooking oil based biodiesel were analyzed. The structural transformation of Fatty Acid Methyl Ester (FAME) of the biodiesels was analyzed by an infrared spectrometer and an ultraviolet absorption spectrometer. The infrared spectra of the samples were recorded by FTIR spectroscopy. The absorbance values of the spectrum bands were observed and it was determined that some of the chemical groups of oxidized oils caused changes in absorbance. The spectroscopic data of degraded biodiesel suggested oxidative polymerization. The results demonstrated that the oxidation behavior of biodiesels of different origins was closely related to the composition and distribution of FAMEs. Higher concentration of unsaturated FAME with multi-double bonds exhibited poorer oxidation resistance. In this study, in order to increase the stability of biodiesel, against oxidation process during the storage and distribution, different percentages (0.02, 0.05, 0.1 and 0.2% (w/v), respectively) of caffeic acid, were added as natural antioxidants. The antioxidant effect increased with concentration up to an optimal level. Above the optimal level, the increase in antioxidant effect with its concentration was relatively small. © Maxwell Scientific Organization, 2014.
format Article
author Saifuddin, N.
Refal, H.
spellingShingle Saifuddin, N.
Refal, H.
Spectroscopic analysis of structural transformation in biodiesel degradation
author_facet Saifuddin, N.
Refal, H.
author_sort Saifuddin, N.
title Spectroscopic analysis of structural transformation in biodiesel degradation
title_short Spectroscopic analysis of structural transformation in biodiesel degradation
title_full Spectroscopic analysis of structural transformation in biodiesel degradation
title_fullStr Spectroscopic analysis of structural transformation in biodiesel degradation
title_full_unstemmed Spectroscopic analysis of structural transformation in biodiesel degradation
title_sort spectroscopic analysis of structural transformation in biodiesel degradation
publishDate 2017
_version_ 1644493824749207552
score 13.211869