How to Prepare Used Cooking Oil for Biodiesel

Thứ bảy - 27/04/2024 01:09
Biodiesel is a combustible fuel that is biodegradable and made from vegetable oil or animal fat. It is desirable as an alternative to petroleum fuel because it uses renewable resources that are less damaging to the environment to produce...

Biodiesel is a combustible fuel that is biodegradable and made from vegetable oil or animal fat. It is desirable as an alternative to petroleum fuel because it uses renewable resources that are less damaging to the environment to produce and emit less harmful greenhouse gasses when burned as fuel. Biodiesel fuel can be used in any vehicle with a compression ignition engine that can take regular diesel fuel. With the proper equipment and safety procedures, you can prepare used cooking oil from your kitchen or a restaurant to make your own biodiesel fuel.

Part 1
Part 1 of 3:

Getting Used Cooking Oil

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Part 2
Part 2 of 3:

Filtering the Oil

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Part 3
Part 3 of 3:

Testing the Oil’s Acidity (Titration Process)

  1. Step 4 Add 0.1% lye solution to your oil and alcohol mixture.
    Slowly drip your lye solution into the container with oil, alcohol, and phenolphthalein. Stir continuously. Stop adding the lye solution when your mixture achieves a pink or magenta color and holds that color for 15 seconds, indicating the correct pH level.[9]
    • Add your lye solution using a graduated syringe or pipette so that you can note exactly how much lye is used. The number of milliliters used to turn the mixture pink for 15 seconds is the same number of grams you’ll need to add to the basic quantity of lye used for the biodiesel process.[10]
    • Aim for a quality of oil that needs 2.5-3.5 ml of lye to turn the mixture pink. You may need to try oil from a number of different sources to find this quality, which is ideal for beginners. Discard oil that requires a very high quantity of lye and try again with oil from a different source.[11]
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Warnings

  • The process of preparing used cooking oil and making biodiesel fuel with it involves highly toxic, flammable, and sensitive chemical materials that should be handled with extreme care and full safety equipment at all times. Consult a qualified chemist or biodiesel maker before attempting any chemical process with hazardous chemicals at home.
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Things You'll Need

  • Used cooking oil
  • Clean, dry plastic bottles or jugs
  • Cooking pot
  • Electric burner
  • Cooking thermometer
  • Funnel
  • Cheesecloth, coffee filter, or screen
  • 2 glass containers
  • Lye (NaOH or KOH)
  • Distilled water
  • Isopropyl (rubbing) alcohol
  • Phenolphthalein solution
  • Graduated syringe or pipette

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