Palm Oil Biofuel
Palm Oil Biofuel
Palm Oil Biofuel
http://dx.doi.org/10.15242/IIE.E0314052
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International Conference on Advances in Engineering and Technology (ICAET'2014) March 29-30, 2014 Singapore
II. METHODOLOGY
A. Goal and scope of research
The goal of this study was to assess greenhouse gas
emissions, and the energy and water balances of the palm oil
biodiesel life cycle. The system boundary of biodiesel
production was scoped based on cradle-to-gate, which was
divided into four main parts including oil palm cultivation,
palm oil mill (palm oil extraction and crude palm oil refining),
and transesterification. In addition, transesterification was
subdivided
into
four
main
processes
including
transesterification reaction, biodiesel purification, glycerol
purification and alcohol purification. The functional unit (FU)
of this study was defined as 1 liter of biodiesel. Fig.1 presents
the system boundary and all the steps of the processes of this
study. The inventory data used in this study were gathered
from both primary and secondary data sources.
B. Oil palm cultivation
More than 70 percent of oil palm is widely cultivated in the
http://dx.doi.org/10.15242/IIE.E0314052
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International Conference on Advances in Engineering and Technology (ICAET'2014) March 29-30, 2014 Singapore
D. Transesterification Stage
The inventory data of the transesterification stage were
collected from a commercialized biodiesel manufacturer with
200,000 liters production capacity per day. Fig.2 shows the
production processes including the transesterification reaction
process, biodiesel purification, glycerol purification and
alcohol purification. In the sampling site, the distillation
systems are used for purifying each chemical. As a
consequence, there is no additional wastewater system
required for treating large amounts of oil contaminated
wastewater. The raw material inputs were palm stearin,
methanol (MeOH), sodium methoxide (or sodium methylate or
NaOCH3) as the alkaline based catalyst, kerobit as the antioxidant for adjusting biodiesel quality, activated carbon,
phosphoric acid (H3PO4) for glycerol neutralization, sodium
chloride (NaCl) for demineralization in water treatment,
electricity (from EGAT: Electricity Generating Authority of
Thailand), tap water and fuel oil. The main product of this
process is neat biodiesel (B100) and the co-products are pure
glycerol and methanol. The waste produced from glycerol and
methanol purification is sold to other manufacturers. Thus, the
impact from waste disposal was not taken into the assumption.
Palm stearin, MeOH, activated carbon, NaCl and fuel oil are
transported by 10-wheel trucks with the distance of 10, 80, 80,
10 and 12 km, respectively. NaOCH3 and kerobit are imported
from China by ship (one-way around 4,020 km) and
transported to factory by truck (80 km). H3PO4 was imported
from Germany by ship (one-way distance of 17,282 km) and
transported by truck (80 km).
(1)
Eproduction= Efuel,acquisition+Efuel,combustion+Ewater+Eelectricity
(2)
E. Transportation
In this study, the transportation stage only accounted for the
FFB and palm stearin transportation because the other raw
materials such as fertilizers and chemicals were allocated in
each stage of the raw material acquisition. Transportation of
FFB, which was collected from secondary data, was
transported by truck with the distance of 50-70 km for a oneway, and 100-140 km for a round trip [7]. However, palm
http://dx.doi.org/10.15242/IIE.E0314052
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International Conference on Advances in Engineering and Technology (ICAET'2014) March 29-30, 2014 Singapore
TABLE I
INVENTORY DATA FOR CALCULATION
Stages
Stages
Amount
(kg/L B100)
Seed
0.16418
Kerobit
N fertilizer
0.13844
0.00000000212
0.00202
P2O5 fertilizer
0.03504
Electricity (kWh/L)*
0.01582
K2O fertilizer
0.26889
Water
0.00141
Glyphosate
0.00467
0.03299
Paraquat
0.00168
0.03299
Diesel
0.00503
17441.8
Diesel (combustion)
0.00503
20.0000
865.000
24.0000
0.03472
H3PO4 (neutralization)
0.00342
0.00098
Activated carbon
0.00020
0.00146
0.00202
0.00456
Electricity (kWh/L)*
0.02003
0.00427
Water
0.00245
0.17073
0.01885
Water (m /L)*
0.01881
0.01885
Diesel
0.00880
4180.00
Diesel (combustion)
0.00880
160.000
0.00405
20.0000
Wastewater (m3/L)*
0.01489
24.0000
3 Transesterification plant
0.00067
MeOH
0.18659
Electricity (kWh/L)*
0.00316
NaOCH3
0.00589
Water
0.00047
0.07688
0.00766
Electricity (kWh/L)*
0.00685
0.00766
0.00707
20.0000
0.00707
24.0000
160.000
4 Transportation
4180.00
120.000
24.0000
20.0000
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International Conference on Advances in Engineering and Technology (ICAET'2014) March 29-30, 2014 Singapore
TABLE II
OVERALL STAGE RESULTS
GHG
Energy
emissions
balance
(kgCO2/L)
(MJ/L)
Stage
1
0.53804
13.82979
23561.87194
1.68715
2.39319
65.98209
Transesterification
Reaction process
0.28602
7.96541
5.46021
Biodiesel purification
0.12102
1.85765
3.03731
Glycerol purification
0.08134
1.22024
3.09654
Methanol purification
0.02779
0.42648
0.64789
FFB
0.09059
2.77558
2.91734
Palm stearin
0.00078
0.02376
0.02498
Overall summation
2.83273
30.49212
23643.03832
Transportation
Material
Outputs
TABLE III
ENERGY OUTPUT
Quantity
Energy
(kg/L)
content
(MJ/kg)
Source
Energy
output
(MJ/L)
Palm kernel
1.02832
17
[5], CV
17.48
Fiber
2.03479
11.4
[7], LHV
23.20
Shell
1.06809
18.46
[5], CV
19.72
EFB
4.14310
7.24
[7], LHV
30.00
Biodiesel
0.87000
38.07
[5], CV
33.12
Pure glycerol
0.04581
19
[5], CV
0.87
Pure methanol
0.09127
20.094
[17], LHV
1.83
Total
126.22
B. Energy balance
The total energy consumption of biodiesel production was
30.49 MJ/L. In Fig.5, the highest energy consumption
associated with the oil palm cultivation stage accounted for
45.36% of all energy consumption. This is because the
acquisition of fertilizers and pesticides consumes a lot of
energy. The palm oil mill stage exhibited the lowest energy
consumption, accounting for 7.85% of all energy consumption.
This is due to the fact that solid wastes can be completely
utilized. For instance, fiber residues are used for generating
electricity or steam.
The transesterification stage consumed approximately 37%
of the total energy (11.47 MJ/L). It was subdivided into the
reaction process (69.44%), biodiesel purification (16.20%),
glycerol purification (10.64%) and methanol purification
(3.72%), as shown in Fig.6. It can be observed from the chart
that the reaction process had the highest energy consumption.
In this step, energy in the form of hot steam is intensively
required in the distillation column to purify crude biodiesel. In
comparison, the biodiesel and glycerol purification consumed
more energy than methanol purification. When considering the
direct energy consumption used in the transesterification stage
Water
balance (L/L)
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International Conference on Advances in Engineering and Technology (ICAET'2014) March 29-30, 2014 Singapore
The total energy input was 30.49 MJ/L (Table II), whereas
the total energy output was 126.22 MJ/L as shown in Table III.
Note that the NEB was 95.72 MJ/L and NER was 4.14, which
are higher than those reported in other previous works [5], [7].
The energy outputs were calculated based on possible
utilization in this study, which included palm kernel, fiber,
empty fruit bunch, shell, pure methanol, pure glycerol and
biodiesel. For instance, EFB can be used for mushroom
cultivation and shells can be used as raw material in activated
carbon production [7].
The energy output of biodiesel described in terms of NEB
and NER were equal to 2.63 MJ/L and 1.09, respectively.
These figures are lower when compared with the results from
previous studies [5], [7], [16], which was because the
transesterification stage could collect data more thoroughly.
Also, the energy output was still greater than the energy input
because it was higher than diesel (NEB -8.3 MJ/kg and NER
0.84) [7].
IV. CONCLUSIONS
The life cycle GHG emissions of biodiesel production were
2.83 kgCO2e/L, and the transesterification stage was 0.52
kgCO2e/L, accounting for 18.22% of the GHG emissions. The
total energy consumption was 30.49 MJ/L. This is higher than
in other studies because the distillation method used for
biodiesel purification consumes a significant amount of
energy. The biodiesel production with distillation requires a
large amount of energy for heating of the distillation column
C. Water balance
The total water consumption of the biodiesel production was
23.64 m3/L, as shown in Table II. The largest water
consumption (99.66%) was associated with oil palm
cultivation and it was followed by palm oil mill, biodiesel
http://dx.doi.org/10.15242/IIE.E0314052
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International Conference on Advances in Engineering and Technology (ICAET'2014) March 29-30, 2014 Singapore
[9]
V. ACKNOWLEDGMENT
[17]
[10]
[11]
[12]
[13]
[14]
[15]
[16]
[18]
[19]
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