Pembuatan Green Diesel dari Perengkahan Katalitik Miyak Jelantah Menggunakan Katalis Bentonite
Manufacturing Green Diesel from Catalytic Cracking Of Waste Cooking Oil using Bentonite Catalyst
Abstract
Until today, 86% of the world's energy is still supplied from fossil fuel. Fossil fuel are
an energy source that will depleted, so it is necessary to look for alternative energy
sources that are sustainable and cheap. Wasted cooking oil is useless and used to
producing biodiesel. Until today, biodiesel still has weaknesses. Therefore, an
alternative route is needed to produce biodiesel. Green diesel is a product of catalytic
cracking which has advantages. But unfortunately, until today development green
diesel is still very difficult because it is very expensive process. So one of the processes
to producing green diesel more economical are decarboxylation and decarbonylation.
Technology catalyst is very suitable for decarboxylation and decarbonylation
processes. One promising catalyst is the silica-alumina catalyst. Based on the case,
researcher are interested synthesis green diesel from the catalytic cracking of wasted
cooking oil with a bentonite catalyst. This research is divided into 3 stages, firstly
preparation of used cooking oil, secondly preparation of bentonite catalyst, and third
catalytic cracking of used cooking oil with variations of bentonite catalyst 1wt%,
3wt%, 5wt%, and without catalyst at a temperature of 350o
C. Based on the four
variations, effective catalyst mass is 5wt% with an average percent yield conversion
of wasted cooking oil of 99,236wt%. GC-MS analysis showed dominant fraction is
kerosene at 65.79%, analysis of changes in functional groups using FT-IR
spectroscopy showed a decrease in the intensity of vibration absorption C=O
stretching with wave number 1700–1750 cm-1
, there is vibration absorption –C–
(C=O)–C– stretching which is special region with wave number 1300–1000 cm-1
, and
no any vibration stretching –OH group of carboxyl acid in the wave number region
3400–2400 cm-1 so it can be concluded that the –CH3 group substitution process has
occurred and termination of the –OH group of carboxyl acids, and physical and
chemical properties shows green diesel own cetane number 48.2, viscosity 4.93 mm2
/s,
density 862 kg/m3
, flash point 39o
C, corrosion class 1a, and carbon residue 0.100069
%m/m.
Collections
- Undergraduate Theses [1307]