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Title:
RECONSTITUTION OF TRIGLYCERIDES FOR USE AS FUEL IN DIESEL ENGINES
Document Type and Number:
WIPO Patent Application WO/2009/068940
Kind Code:
A1
Abstract:
The present invention describes a process for the production of triglycerides from by¬ products of chemical and physical refining of vegetable and/or animal oils, oils and fatty acids no longer usable for producing refined oils, fatty acids from distillation and otherwise, hydrolytically cracked fatty substances and distilled and non-distilled fatty acids from the cracking of soaps.

Inventors:
PARODI AUGUSTO (IT)
MARINI LEANDRO (IT)
Application Number:
PCT/IB2007/054974
Publication Date:
June 04, 2009
Filing Date:
December 07, 2007
Export Citation:
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Assignee:
A & A F LLI PARODI SRL (IT)
DP LUBRIFICANTI SRL (IT)
PARODI AUGUSTO (IT)
MARINI LEANDRO (IT)
International Classes:
C11C1/08; C11C1/10; C11C3/02
Domestic Patent References:
WO2005019153A12005-03-03
Foreign References:
GB978085A1964-12-16
US5169670A1992-12-08
US4366100A1982-12-28
US1758634A1930-05-13
Attorney, Agent or Firm:
DE ANNA, Pier Luigi (Bavariaring 21, Munich, DE)
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Claims:
Claims

1. Process of direct esterification with glycerol of fatty acid substances having a neutralisation number (nn) between 2 and 300, comprising the following phases: (a) reaction of the initial fatty substance with a quantity of glycerol between 0.7 and 20 times the stoichiometric quantity necessary calculated from the neutralisation number of the fatty substance used, to obtain glyceric ester with nn between 0 and 30; (b) refining process comprising the following successive phases:

- stripping of the ester obtained with water vapour; - addition of a strong mineral acid to the oil thus obtained;

- treatment of the oil with organic carbonates; - filtering of the oil.

2. Process as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the concentration of the catalyst used is between 0 and 5% by weight of the total of the substances used.

3. Process as claimed in one of the preceding claims, wherein the original fatty acid substances are derived from chemical and/or physical deacidification or a combination of the two, or from distillation of the fatty substances deriving from the chemical and/or physical deacidification or a combination of the above

2 components in any percentage, or from the refining of glycerin in which an acid fraction due to the cracked soaps and a neutral part which comprises methyl esters, mono-, di-, and tri-glycerides, or oils and fatty acids that can no longer be used to produce refined oils, co-exist.

4. Process as claimed in claim 3, wherein said fatty acid substances are oleins.

5. Process as claimed in one of the preceding claims, wherein the catalysts used can be acid or basic, solid or liquid such as tin and its salts, zinc and its salts, titanium and its salts and esters or sulphuric, p-toluenesulphonic, methanesulphuric or phosphoric acid.

6. Process as claimed in claim 5, wherein the catalysts are supported on a resin, a zeolite or similar substrate.

10

7. Process as claimed in one of the preceding claims, wherein the fatty acid substances to be treated have an initial acidity between 2 and 300 mg KOH/g, while at the end of the reaction the acidity is between 0.1 and 0.5 mg KOH/g.

8. Process as claimed in one of the preceding claims, wherein the reaction begins at a temperature between 110 and 150°C and terminates at a temperature between 210 and 250 0 C in 8 hours, and wherein the absolute pressure up to the sixth hour is 1 bar, while in the last 2 hours the absolute pressure is a residual 5- 10 mbar.

9. Process as claimed in one of the preceding claims, wherein the temperature is brought to 200 0 C and the reactor is kept under vacuum.

10. Process as claimed in one of the preceding claims, wherein the stripping of the ester thus obtained permits the removal of volatile fractions such as water, odorous substances and other volatile products.

11. Process as claimed in one of the preceding claims, wherein in the refining phase the strong mineral acid is added in a quantity between 0.001 and 1% and concentrations between 1 and 100% after cooling of the oil to a temperature between 20 and 100 0 C.

12. Process as claimed in one of the preceding claims, wherein the carbonates added to the oil in the refining phase are chosen from Na 2 CO 3 , K 2 CO 3 or CaCO 3 in the solid state.

13. Process as claimed in one of the preceding claims, wherein in the final filtering phase a fraction of synthetic siliceous earth or another filtering adjuvant is added to the oil; it is then filtered with a continuous and/or discontinuous filter to obtain an ash content below 0.01% of the mass, carbon residues below 0.1 of the mass and a water content up to 200 ppm.

Description:

Reconstitution of triglycerides for use as fuel in diesel engines

Field of the invention

The present invention relates to a process for the reconstitution of triglycerides, chemically identical to their natural form, from waste produced by the refining of vegetable oils and glycerin generated during the manufacture of biodiesel. In particular, the process is best used in recovery of the oleins deriving from refining for the production of electricity.

State of the art

Considering the growing interest in biofuels, in the near future there is the risk that the supply of vegetable oils will not be able to meet the increasing demand. According to the normative of the European Community, the production of biodiesel should increase more than proportionally with respect to introduction of non-renewable fuels onto the market. The current law establishes that the percentage of biofuels or other renewable fuels used in transport must be 1 % by December 2005 (objective never achieved), 2.5% by 31st December 2008, 5.75% by 31st December 2010 and 20% in 2020. Parallel to this, there is a strong increase in the demand for vegetable oil as one of the most interesting renewable sources for the production of electricity and heat according to the normative provisions of the European Community (Directive 2001/77/CE on the promotion of electricity produced from renewable energy sources). Up to today, in Italy alone, out of a total of 64 biomass plants (equivalent to a power of 1481 MW) qualified by the Grtn (manager of the national grid) during 2006, 23 ran on liquid biofuel (equivalent to a power of 160 MW).

Interest in liquid biofuels is a recent development but is currently growing faster than interest in other biofuels due to the simplicity in terms of logistics and management of the renewable source with respect to solid waste or biomasses.

The only limit to the growth of these plants, at least at national level, is represented by the difficulty of locating the raw material. The growing production of biodiesel determines a growing production of glycerin (1 ,2,3-propanetriol). The latter is the co-product with the greatest economic impact in the modern oil and chemical industry. The glycerol is obtained from hydrolytic cracking, under pressure, of triglycerides (production of fatty acids), from transesterification of triglycerides to methyl esters (biodiesel) and from saponification of glycerides with alkalis (soap-making).

Following the introduction of biodiesel as an alternative fuel for engines and for heating, a big increase has been recorded in the related production and therefore availability of glycerin (approximately 1.5 million tons per year). Although the growth in the biofuel market is constant and unstoppable, the same cannot be said for glycerin. Consumption of glycerol has remained stable and, in the opinion of the experts, will not increase unless alternative market outlets are found in the future. Attention should therefore be focused on how to utilise a product like glycerin coming from the vegetable oils used in the production of biodiesel.

A further aspect to be taken into consideration is the growing production of acid oils (oleins), the actual destination of which is not known, from the refining of vegetable oils. Oleins are represented by a mixture of fatty acids (oleic acid, palmitic acid, linoleic acid etc.) and vegetable oils deriving from chemical refining (soapy pastes) and physical refining (deacidification with stripping) of vegetable oils. The production of oleins depends on the vegetable oil and its acidity. In particular, the oleins consist not only of fatty acids but also fractions of tri-, di- and monoglycerides, via which the oil loses an extra 25% acidity in weight, on average, in respect of the original value. For example, in optimal conditions, an oil with 2% acidity loses 2.5-3% in oleins.

Disclosure of the invention

The subject of the present invention is the production of a simple convenient method for the reconstitution of triglycerides from oleins and glycerin, renewable vegetable sources easily located and continuously increasing in terms of supply, which guarantees a good yield and simultaneously limits the production of by-products harmful to the operator and the environment. The present invention therefore describes a process for the production of triglycerides from by-products of chemical and physical refining of vegetable and/or animal oils, oils and fatty acids no longer usable for producing refined oils, fatty acids from distillation and other processes, hydrolytically cracked fatty substances and distilled and non-distilled fatty acids from the cracking of soaps.

Vegetable oils are generally obtained by extraction from seeds, by means of solvent or pressure, while animal fats are obtained by hot extraction in autoclaves or by means of solvent. Normally these fatty substances contain free fatty acids, sterols, phospholipids, water, odorous substances and other impurities. Refining of the fatty substances involves

complete removal of all the impurities including the free fatty acids so that they can be used in the production of biodiesel, in food and in industry in general. Hence the intention to develop a process of direct esterification with glycerol of fatty acid substances with neutralisation number (nn) between 2 and 300.

Detailed disclosure of the present invention

The object of the present invention is achieved by means of a process of direct esterification with glycerol of fatty acid substances with neutralisation number (nn) between 2 and 300, comprising the following phases: (a) reaction of the initial fatty substance with a quantity of glycerol between 0.7 and 20 times the stoichiometric quantity necessary calculated from the neutralisation number of the fatty substance used, to obtain a glyceric ester with nn between 0 and 30; (b) refining process comprising the following successive phases:

- stripping of the ester obtained with water vapour; - addition of a strong mineral acid to the oil thus obtained;

- treatment of the oil with organic carbonates; - filtering of the oil.

Said process constitutes the subject of claim 1. The dependent claims define further advantageous aspects of the invention.

According to the method of the present invention, a fatty acid substance coming from chemical and/or physical deacidification or a combination of the two, or from distillation of the fatty substances deriving from chemical or physical deacidification or a combination of the above 2 components in any percentage, or from the refining of glycerin, in which an acid fraction due to the cracked soaps and a neutral part which comprises methyl esters, mono-, di-, and tri-glycerides with nn between 2 and 300 co-exist, is placed in a reactor, quantified in weight and, with the addition of glycerol in a quantity of between 0.7 and 20 times the stoichiometric quantity necessary calculated from the neutralisation number of the fatty substance used, is made to react to obtain a glyceric ester with nn between 0 and 30. The esterification is carried out with development of water and subsequent condensation; the concentration of the catalyst used is between 0 and 5% by weight of the total of the substances used.

A strong acid is added to the product to eliminate the presence, even minimum, of sodium and potassium soaps not otherwise separable by means of filtering.

Table A_ Treatment with strong acids

(a) 2.85= 2.4 (organic ac) + 0.45 (inorganic ac)

(b) 1.62= 1.4 (organic ac) + 0.22 (inorganic ac)

The system releases fatty acid but salifies to sodium and potassium sulphates the two metalloids which can be subsequently retained by the filtering.

The carbonates subsequently used are added in the form of powder in order to avoid the risk, albeit minimum, of Na, K and Ca binding with fatty acids to form new soaps.

Table B: treatment with free alkalis

The catalysts can be acid or basic, solid or liquid, such as tin and its salts, zinc and its salts, titanium and its salts and esters or sulphuric, p-toluenesulphonic, methanesulphuric or phosphoric acid also supported on resins, zeolite and similar. With the present process it is also possible to work without any catalysts.

The advantages of the present invention are that the process provides for esterification of the acidity present in the fatty substances by means of glycerin with the exclusion of methyl alcohol, ethanol, propanol, butanol and other alcohols and polyalcohols; it does

not require purification of the original fatty substance; the oleins are a strictly renewable vegetable , product like glycerin; the present method permits the elimination of volatile products by means of vapour stripping and also the elimination of ash and organic substances in suspension.

Table C: Filtering

Initial ash Initial soaps Total ash after Sulphur after Soaps after

NGD C9 NGD C8 filtering NGD filtering filtering

(%) (ppm) C9 (%) ISO 20846 NGD C8

(ppm) (ppm)

1.3 20 0.01 1 Il

0.79 15 0.015 2 Il

Examples of embodiment of the invention

Example 1 1000 g of fatty acid substance coming from the refining of colza oil with acidity of 120 mg

KOH/g, 66 g of glycerol and 4.26 g of 2-ethylhexyltitanate are placed in an SS316 stirred reactor and heated. The reaction begins at 130 0 C and terminates at 230 0 C in 8 hours.

The absolute pressure up to the sixth hour is 1 bar, in the last 2 hours the absolute pressure is a residual 5-10 mbar and the final acidity of the triglyceride is 0.5 mg KOH/g. The temperature is brought to 200 0 C and the reactor is kept under vacuum; dry saturated vapour is injected through a nozzle positioned in the lower part.

In this way the oil is stripped and the volatile fractions such as water, odorous substances and other volatile products are removed. The operation terminates with disappearance of the post-exchanger condensate. The oil thus reconstituted is cooled to a temperature of between 20 and 100 0 C and strong mineral acid is added in quantities of between 0.001 and 1% and concentrations between 1 and 100%.

Carbonates such as Na 2 CO 3 ZK 2 CO 3 ZCaCO 3 are added to the oil in order to salify any excess mineral acidity; it is then placed in a vacuum with the addition of a fraction of synthetic siliceous earth or filtering adjuvants and filtered with continuous andZor discontinuous filters to obtain an ash content below 0.01% of the mass, carbon residues below 0.1 of the mass and a water content up to 200 ppm.

Example 2

1000 g of fatty acid substance coming from the refining of sunflower oil with acidity of 120 mg KOH/g, 66 g of glycerol and 4.26 g of 2-ethylhexyltitanate are placed in an SS316 stirred reactor and heated. The reaction begins at 130 0 C and terminates at 230°C in 8 hours. The absolute pressure up to the sixth hour is 1 bar, in the last 2 hours the absolute pressure is a residual 5-10 mbar and the final acidity of the triglyceride is 0.5 mg

KOH/g.

The temperature is brought to 200 0 C and the reactor is kept in a vacuum; dry saturated vapour is injected through a nozzle positioned in the lower part.

In this way the oil is stripped and the volatile fractions such as water, odorous substances and other volatile products are removed. The operation terminates with disappearance of the post-exchanger condensate.

The oil thus reconstituted is cooled to a temperature of between 20 and 100 0 C and strong mineral acid is added in quantities of between 0.001 and 1% and concentrations between 1 and 100%.

Carbonates such as Na 2 CO 3 ZK 2 CO 3 ZCaCO 3 are added to the oil in order to salify any excess mineral acidity; it is then placed in a vacuum with the addition of a fraction of synthetic siliceous earth or filtering adjuvants and filtered with continuous andZor discontinuous filters to obtain an ash content below 0.01% of the mass, carbon residues below 0.1 of the mass and a water content up to 200 ppm.

Example 3

1000 g of fatty acid substance coming from the refining of almond oil with acidity of 120 mg KOHZg, 66 g of glycerol and 4.26 g of 2-ethylhexyltitanate are placed in an SS316 stirred reactor and heated. The reaction begins at 130 0 C and terminates at 230 0 C in 8 hours. The absolute pressure up to the sixth hour is 1 bar, in the last 2 hours the absolute pressure is a residual 5-10 mbar and the final acidity of the triglyceride is 0.5 mg

KOHZg. The temperature is brought to 200 0 C and the reactor is kept in a vacuum; dry saturated vapour is injected through a nozzle positioned in the lower part.

In this way the oil is stripped and the volatile fractions such as water, odorous substances and other volatile products are removed. The operation terminates with disappearance of the post-exchanger condensate.

The oil thus reconstituted is cooled to a temperature of between 20 and 100 0 C and strong mineral acid is added in quantities of between 0.001 and 1% and concentrations between 1 and 100%.

Carbonates such as Na 2 CO 3 ZK 2 CO 3 ZCaCO 3 are added to the oil in order to salify any excess mineral acidity; it is then placed in a vacuum with the addition of a fraction of synthetic siliceous earth or filtering adjuvants and filtered with continuous andZor discontinuous filters to obtain an ash content below 0.01% of the mass, carbon residues below 0.1 of the mass and a water content up to 200 ppm.

Example 4

1000 g of fatty acid substance coming from the refining of glycerol from biodiesel with acidity of 40 mg KOHZg, 30 g of glycerol and 1.03 g of tin chloride are placed in an SS316 stirred reactor and heated. The reaction begins at 130 0 C and terminates at 230 0 C in 8 hours at absolute pressure. The absolute pressure up to the sixth hour is 1 bar, in the last 2 hours the absolute pressure is a residual 1-5 mbar and the final acidity of the triglyceride is 0.1 mg KOHZg.

The temperature is brought to 200 0 C and the reactor is kept in a vacuum; dry saturated vapour is injected through a nozzle positioned in the lower part. In this way the oil is stripped and the volatile fractions such as water, odorous substances and other volatile products are removed. The operation terminates with disappearance of the post-exchanger condensate.

The oil thus reconstituted is cooled to a temperature of between 20 and 100 0 C and strong mineral acid is added in quantities of between 0.001 and 1% and concentrations between 1 and 100%. Carbonates such as Na 2 CO 3 ZK 2 CO 3 ZCaCO 3 are added to the oil in order to salify any excess mineral acidity; it is then placed in a vacuum with the addition of a fraction of synthetic siliceous earth or filtering adjuvants and filtered with continuous andZor discontinuous filters to obtain an ash content below 0.01 % of the mass, carbon residues below 0.1 of the mass and a water content up to 200 ppm.