Hydrotreated vegetable oil

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Hydrotreated vegetable oil (HVO) is a biofuel made by the hydrocracking or hydrogenation of vegetable oil. Hydrocracking breaks big molecules into smaller ones using hydrogen while hydrogenation adds hydrogen to molecules. These methods can be used to create substitutes for gasoline, diesel, propane, kerosene and other chemical feedstock. Diesel fuel produced from these sources is known as green diesel or renewable diesel.

Diesel fuel created by hydrotreating is called green diesel and is distinct from the biodiesel made through esterification.

Feedstock

The majority of plant and animal oils are triglycerides, suitable for refining. Refinery feedstock includes canola, algae, jatropha, salicornia, palm oil, tallow and soybeans. One type of algae, Botryococcus braunii produces a different type of oil, known as a triterpene, which is transformed into alkanes by a different process.[citation needed]

Chemical analysis

Synthesis

The production of hydrotreated vegetable oils is based on introducing hydrogen molecules into the raw fat or oil molecule. This process is associated with the reduction of the carbon compound. When hydrogen is used to react with triglycerides, different types of reactions can occur, and different resultant products are combined.[1] The second step of the process involves converting the triglycerides/fatty acids to hydrocarbons by hydrodeoxygenation (removing oxygen as water) and/or decarboxylation (removing oxygen as carbon dioxide).

A formulaic example of this is C3H5(RCOO)3 + 12H2 -> C3H8 + 3RCH3 + 6H2O

Chemical composition

The chemical formula for HVO Diesel is CnH2n+2

Chemical properties

Hydrotreated oils are characterized by very good low temperature properties. The cloud point also occurs below −40 °C. Therefore, these fuels are suitable for the preparation of premium fuel with a high cetane number and excellent low temperature properties. The cold filter plugging point (CFPP) virtually corresponds to the cloud point value, which is why the value of the cloud point is significant in the case of hydrotreated oils.[1]

Comparison to biodiesel

Both HVO diesel (green diesel) and biodiesel are made from the same vegetable oil feedstock. However the processing technologies and chemical makeup of the two fuels differ. The chemical reaction commonly used to produce biodiesel is known as transesterification.[2]

The production of biodiesel also makes glycerol, but the production of HVO does not.

Commercialization

Various stages of converting renewable hydrocarbon fuels produced by hydrotreating is done throughout energy industry. Some commercial examples of vegetable oil refining are:

Neste is the largest manufacturer, producing 2 million tonnes annually (2013).[7] Neste completed their first NExBTL plant in the summer 2007 and the second one in 2009. Petrobras planned to use 256 megalitres (1,610,000 bbl) of vegetable oils in the production of H-Bio fuel in 2007. ConocoPhilips is processing 42,000 US gallons per day (1,000 bbl/d) of vegetable oil. Other companies working on the commercialization and industrialization of renewable hydrocarbons and biofuels include Neste, REG Synthetic Fuels, LLC, ENI, UPM Biofuels, Diamond Green Diesel partnered with countries across the globe. In practice, these renewable diesels lower greenhouse gas emissions by 40-90%,[8] have higher energy per content yields than petroleum-based diesels, and better cold-flow properties to work in colder climates.[8] In addition, all of these green diesels can be introduced into any diesel engine or infrastructure without many mechanical modifications at any ratio with petroleum-based diesels.[8]

Renewable diesel from vegetable oil is a growing substitute for petroleum.[9] California fleets used over 200,000,000 gallons of renewable diesel in 2017. The California Air Resources Board predicts that over 2 billion gallons of fuel will be consumed in the state under its Low Carbon Fuel Standard requirements in the next ten years. Fleets operating on Renewable Diesel from various refiners and feedstocks are reported to see lower emissions, reduced maintenance costs, and nearly identical experience when driving with this fuel.[10]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.80px This article incorporates text from this source, which is available under the CC BY 4.0 license.
  2. "Hydrotreated Vegetable Oils (HVO)", European Alternative Fuels Observatory (retrieved 27 May 2021).
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