Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 16 segundos...
Inicio  /  Environments  /  Vol: 5 Núm: 9 Par: Septemb (2018)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Determination of Quality Properties of Low-Grade Biodiesel and Its Heating Oil Blends

Kleopatra Poyadji    
Marinos Stylianou    
Agapios Agapiou    
Christos Kallis and Nikolaos Kokkinos    

Resumen

This research work examined how biodiesel produced from frying oils affects the physicochemical properties of its mixtures with conventional heating oil. Through the characterization of biodiesel blends and heating oil, the purpose is to produce an improved heating oil that will meet the specifications of the existing legislation for heating oil, while positively contributing to reducing the production of pollutants. The percentage of biodiesel added to a conventional diesel fuel contributes to the reduction of the pollutants produced during combustion. The examined biodiesel is considered the residual product, which was produced at a factory in Cyprus, and was deemed unsuitable for export, because it does not meet the legal requirements. Using specific volumes of these mixtures, twelve parameters were determined in order to investigate the effect of the mixtures: kinematic viscosity, sulfur content, micro carbon residue (MCR), distillation curves, density, cloud point (CP), fatty acid methyl esters (FAMEs) content, heat of combustion, iodine value (IV), cetane index (CI) after distillation, oxidation stability, and cold filter plugging point (CFPP). A number of fuel properties including the kinematic viscosity, MCR, distillation temperature—up to 80% distillate—and density showed an increase as the percentage of FAMEs raised from 2.5 to 50%, while others showed a mixed behavior (e.g., IV, CP, CI, CFPP), and the rest an inverse trend (e.g., sulfur content, heat of combustion and oxidation stability). An efficient potential utilization of a residual domestic product is proposed, while the pollutants that accumulate on the urban atmospheres during the winter months, due to increased heating needs of homes and other public or private buildings, will be significantly reduced.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Dongbo Cai, Shaoqiang Chai, Mingzhuan Wei, Hui Wu, Nan Shen, Yin Zhou, Yanchao Ding, Kaixin Hu and Xingyi Hu    
The current expansion of building structures has created a demand for efficient and smart surface quality evaluation at the acceptance phase. However, the conventional approach mainly relies on manual work, which is labor-intensive, time-consuming, and u... ver más
Revista: Buildings

 
Ivan Benkov, Marian Varbanov, Tony Venelinov and Stefan Tsakovski    
The water quality assessment of the surface water bodies (SWBs) is one of the major tasks of environmental authorities dealing with water management. The present study proposes a water quality assessment scheme for the investigation of the surface waters... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Fan Huang, Haiping Zhang, Qiaofeng Wu, Shanqing Chi and Mingqing Yang    
The proper dispatching of hydraulic structures in water diversion projects is a desirable way to maximize project benefits. This study aims to provide a reliable, optimal scheduling model for hydraulic engineering to improve the regional water environmen... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Dhan Lord B. Fortela, Armani Travis, Ashley P. Mikolajczyk, Wayne Sharp, Emmanuel Revellame, William Holmes, Rafael Hernandez and Mark E. Zappi    
Wastewater (WW) analysis is a critical step in various operations, such as the control of a WW treatment facility, and speeding up the analysis of WW quality can significantly improve such operations. This work demonstrates the capability of neural netwo... ver más

 
Andrej Stroj, Maja Bri?ki, Jasmina Lukac Reberski and Tihomir Frangen    
Tracer testing is the only method in karst hydrogeology that can definitively determine whether a particular site belongs to a watershed of a particular karst spring. Therefore, it is an essential technique for delineating groundwater basins in karst are... ver más
Revista: Hydrology