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Détail de l'auteur
Auteur R. Turco
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur
Affiner la rechercheBiodiesel process intensification by using static mixers tubular reactors / E. Santacesaria in Industrial & engineering chemistry research, Vol. 51 N° 26 (Juillet 2012)
[article]
in Industrial & engineering chemistry research > Vol. 51 N° 26 (Juillet 2012) . - pp. 8777–8787
Titre : Biodiesel process intensification by using static mixers tubular reactors Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : E. Santacesaria, Auteur ; R. Turco, Auteur ; M. Tortorelli, Auteur Année de publication : 2012 Article en page(s) : pp. 8777–8787 Note générale : Industrial chemistry Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : Biodiesel process Résumé : Biodiesel is usually produced by reacting triglycerides, contained in vegetable oils, with methanol in the presence of KOH, NaOH, or related alkoxides as catalysts. In industry, the reaction is performed in stirred tank reactors and requires 1–2 h of reaction time being the reaction rate strongly affected by mass transfer limitation. We have recently shown, by using a Corrugated Plates Heat Exchanger Reactor, that a very high productivity (about 2 tons/day L) can be obtained by working at 60–100 °C thanks to the presence of an intense local “micromixing”. Moreover, we have recently tested the performances obtained in a tubular reactor filled with stainless steel spheres of different diameters. By opportunely changing the spheres diameters it is possible to obtain microchannels in a range of 300–1000 μm with an intense local micromixing. Again, thanks to micromixing we obtained very high productivities. However, in these last reactors the void portion of the reactor is low and the productivity per overall reactor volume is relatively low. It is possible to obtain better results, in terms of productivity, by filling the tubular reactor with stainless steel wool, being in this case the void fraction about 0.9. In the present work, some of the mentioned systems will be compared for their performances by using different amounts of KOH as catalyst (1 or 2% b.w. of oil). A dramatic change in biodiesel yield has been observed in all cases passing from 1 to 2% of catalyst independently of the reactants flow rate. These behaviors cannot be interpreted with the pseudomonophasic kinetic models, normally reported in the literature. At this purpose, for interpreting all the observed kinetic behaviors a new biphasic kinetic model, based on a reliable catalytic mechanism, has been developed. This model has been applied, first of all, to data reported in the literature related to runs performed in batch conditions with the scope of estimating the kinetic parameters, and then it has been applied to all the runs performed in continuous reactors with a satisfactory agreement. ISSN : 0888-5885 En ligne : http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ie201640w [article] Biodiesel process intensification by using static mixers tubular reactors [texte imprimé] / E. Santacesaria, Auteur ; R. Turco, Auteur ; M. Tortorelli, Auteur . - 2012 . - pp. 8777–8787.
Industrial chemistry
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Industrial & engineering chemistry research > Vol. 51 N° 26 (Juillet 2012) . - pp. 8777–8787
Mots-clés : Biodiesel process Résumé : Biodiesel is usually produced by reacting triglycerides, contained in vegetable oils, with methanol in the presence of KOH, NaOH, or related alkoxides as catalysts. In industry, the reaction is performed in stirred tank reactors and requires 1–2 h of reaction time being the reaction rate strongly affected by mass transfer limitation. We have recently shown, by using a Corrugated Plates Heat Exchanger Reactor, that a very high productivity (about 2 tons/day L) can be obtained by working at 60–100 °C thanks to the presence of an intense local “micromixing”. Moreover, we have recently tested the performances obtained in a tubular reactor filled with stainless steel spheres of different diameters. By opportunely changing the spheres diameters it is possible to obtain microchannels in a range of 300–1000 μm with an intense local micromixing. Again, thanks to micromixing we obtained very high productivities. However, in these last reactors the void portion of the reactor is low and the productivity per overall reactor volume is relatively low. It is possible to obtain better results, in terms of productivity, by filling the tubular reactor with stainless steel wool, being in this case the void fraction about 0.9. In the present work, some of the mentioned systems will be compared for their performances by using different amounts of KOH as catalyst (1 or 2% b.w. of oil). A dramatic change in biodiesel yield has been observed in all cases passing from 1 to 2% of catalyst independently of the reactants flow rate. These behaviors cannot be interpreted with the pseudomonophasic kinetic models, normally reported in the literature. At this purpose, for interpreting all the observed kinetic behaviors a new biphasic kinetic model, based on a reliable catalytic mechanism, has been developed. This model has been applied, first of all, to data reported in the literature related to runs performed in batch conditions with the scope of estimating the kinetic parameters, and then it has been applied to all the runs performed in continuous reactors with a satisfactory agreement. ISSN : 0888-5885 En ligne : http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ie201640w