Effect of temperature and hydrogen on palm oil cracking over MCM-41/ZSM-5 composite catalysts

The diminishing source of non-renewable energy has spurred the interests of researchers to explore the possibility to use alternative sources. Catalytic cracking of vegetable oil to liquid fuels was studied by a number of individuals and the results were encouraging to continue with this study. Comp...

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Main Author: Abdul Karim, Siti Kartina
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2006
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/3219/1/SitiKartinaAbdulKarimMFKKSA2006.pdf
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spelling my-utm-ep.32192018-06-26T07:56:24Z Effect of temperature and hydrogen on palm oil cracking over MCM-41/ZSM-5 composite catalysts 2006-04 Abdul Karim, Siti Kartina TP Chemical technology The diminishing source of non-renewable energy has spurred the interests of researchers to explore the possibility to use alternative sources. Catalytic cracking of vegetable oil to liquid fuels was studied by a number of individuals and the results were encouraging to continue with this study. Composite catalyst, MCM-41/ZSM-5 was used to catalytically convert palm oil to gasoline. The effects of temperature and hydrogen on palm oil cracking were investigated. Experiments were conducted in a fixed bed reactor at atmospheric pressure. Comparative performance of MCM- 41/ZSM-5 catalysts synthesized using different methods was evaluated before further testing. The variables tested were temperature (525 to 575°C) for cracking and hydrocracking reaction, palm oil to hydrogen ratio of 1:2 to 1:3.5, hydrotreatment flow rate (0.5 to 1.5 L/h) and hydrotreatment duration (1 to 3h). Catalysts used were characterized using X-ray Diffraction, Nitrogen Adsorption and Pyridine Infrared Spectrophotometry methods. The liquid and gaseous products were analyzed using Gas Chromatography. Conversion increased with temperature, whether in cracking or hydrocracking. Increase in hydrogen to palm oil molar ratio and longer catalyst hydrotreatment duration decreased palm oil conversion and gasoline selectivity. On the other hand, increasing the flow rate of catalyst hydrotreatment increased conversion, organic liquid products’ yield and gasoline selectivity. Aromatics were absent or nearly absent with hydrocracking and longer hydrotreatment duration. Gaseous products consisted of mainly C3 and C4 compounds 2006-04 Thesis http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/3219/ http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/3219/1/SitiKartinaAbdulKarimMFKKSA2006.pdf application/pdf en public masters Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Faculty of Chemical and Natural Resources Engineering Faculty of Chemical and Natural Resources Engineering
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
collection UTM Institutional Repository
language English
topic TP Chemical technology
spellingShingle TP Chemical technology
Abdul Karim, Siti Kartina
Effect of temperature and hydrogen on palm oil cracking over MCM-41/ZSM-5 composite catalysts
description The diminishing source of non-renewable energy has spurred the interests of researchers to explore the possibility to use alternative sources. Catalytic cracking of vegetable oil to liquid fuels was studied by a number of individuals and the results were encouraging to continue with this study. Composite catalyst, MCM-41/ZSM-5 was used to catalytically convert palm oil to gasoline. The effects of temperature and hydrogen on palm oil cracking were investigated. Experiments were conducted in a fixed bed reactor at atmospheric pressure. Comparative performance of MCM- 41/ZSM-5 catalysts synthesized using different methods was evaluated before further testing. The variables tested were temperature (525 to 575°C) for cracking and hydrocracking reaction, palm oil to hydrogen ratio of 1:2 to 1:3.5, hydrotreatment flow rate (0.5 to 1.5 L/h) and hydrotreatment duration (1 to 3h). Catalysts used were characterized using X-ray Diffraction, Nitrogen Adsorption and Pyridine Infrared Spectrophotometry methods. The liquid and gaseous products were analyzed using Gas Chromatography. Conversion increased with temperature, whether in cracking or hydrocracking. Increase in hydrogen to palm oil molar ratio and longer catalyst hydrotreatment duration decreased palm oil conversion and gasoline selectivity. On the other hand, increasing the flow rate of catalyst hydrotreatment increased conversion, organic liquid products’ yield and gasoline selectivity. Aromatics were absent or nearly absent with hydrocracking and longer hydrotreatment duration. Gaseous products consisted of mainly C3 and C4 compounds
format Thesis
qualification_level Master's degree
author Abdul Karim, Siti Kartina
author_facet Abdul Karim, Siti Kartina
author_sort Abdul Karim, Siti Kartina
title Effect of temperature and hydrogen on palm oil cracking over MCM-41/ZSM-5 composite catalysts
title_short Effect of temperature and hydrogen on palm oil cracking over MCM-41/ZSM-5 composite catalysts
title_full Effect of temperature and hydrogen on palm oil cracking over MCM-41/ZSM-5 composite catalysts
title_fullStr Effect of temperature and hydrogen on palm oil cracking over MCM-41/ZSM-5 composite catalysts
title_full_unstemmed Effect of temperature and hydrogen on palm oil cracking over MCM-41/ZSM-5 composite catalysts
title_sort effect of temperature and hydrogen on palm oil cracking over mcm-41/zsm-5 composite catalysts
granting_institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Faculty of Chemical and Natural Resources Engineering
granting_department Faculty of Chemical and Natural Resources Engineering
publishDate 2006
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/3219/1/SitiKartinaAbdulKarimMFKKSA2006.pdf
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