Novel Acid Catalysts from Waste‐Tire‐Derived Carbon: Application in Waste–to‐Biofuel Conversion
Article 2017 en
Authors
ZH
Zachary D. Hood
SA
Shiba P. Adhikari
YL
Yunchao Li
Abstract
1 min read
Abstract Many inexpensive biofuel feedstocks, including those containing free fatty acids (FFAs) in high concentrations, are typically disposed of as waste due to our inability to efficiently convert them into usable biofuels. Here we demonstrate that carbon derived from waste tires could be functionalized with sulfonic acid (‐SO 3 H) to effectively catalyze the esterification of oleic acid or a mixture of fatty acids to usable biofuels. Waste tires were converted to hard carbon, then functionalized with catalytically active ‐SO 3 H groups on the surface through an environmentally benign process that involved the sequential treatment with L‐cysteine, dithiothreitol, and H 2 O 2 . When benchmarked against the same waste‐tire derived carbon material treated with concentrated sulfuric acid at 150 °C, similar catalytic activity was observed. Both catalysts could also effectively convert oleic acid or a mixture of fatty acids and soybean oil to usable biofuels at 65 °C and 1 atm without leaching of the catalytic sites.
Allison N. Pearson, Julie Lynch, Cindy Ho, Graham A. Hudson, Jacob B. Roberts, Javier Menasalvas, Aaron A. Vilchez, Matthew R. Incha, Matthias Schmidt, Aindrila Mukhopadhyay, Adam M. Deutschbauer, Mitchell G. Thompson, Patrick M. Shih, Jay D Keasling
Allison N. Pearson, Julie Lynch, Cindy Ho, Graham A. Hudson, Jacob B. Roberts, Javier Menasalvas, Aaron A. Vilchez, Matthew R. Incha, Matthias Schmidt, Aindrila Mukhopadhyay, Adam M. Deutschbauer, Mitchell G. Thompson, Patrick M. Shih, Jay D Keasling
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