Driven by Innovation: Illinois Waste Management and Research
Center Explores the Possibilities of Biodiesel
There’s a new truck on the University of Illinois
campus emitting the tantalizing aroma of fried food. But it’s
not a new lunch cart or caterer. It’s an experiment in cleaner
fuel. The goal is to turn a
common
waste into an effective, environmentally friendly, domestically
produced fuel. The pleasant-smelling exhaust fumes are just a
bonus.
Scientists at the Illinois Waste Management and
Research Center (WMRC) are converting used cooking oil collected
from the University’s Dining Services to biodiesel as part
of an alternative fuels program. WMRC is a division of the Illinois
Department of Natural Resources and a University of Illinois affiliate.
Tim Lindsey, director of WMRC’s technical assistance program,
says that about 2000 gallons of grease from UI Dining Services
will be converted to fuel per year. The 100% pure biodiesel, or
B100, is being used to power a standard diesel Ford 250 pickup
truck.
This makes the WMRC project particularly interesting,
since what is commonly referred to and sold as biodiesel is actually
a blend of pure biodiesel and petroleum diesel (B20, or 20% biodiesel,
80% petroleum diesel, for example) to improve performance during
colder temperatures. Chemical
additives,
rather than petroleum diesel, will be mixed with the pure biodiesel
in the WMRC truck to offset cold weather issues during Illinois
winters. Researchers will evaluate the performance of the biodiesel
under various conditions and seek ways to improve or innovate
upon the process of biodiesel production.
Most people think of biodiesel as a relatively new
form of alternative fuel that is produced exclusively from soybean
oil. However, Rudolf Diesel invented the Diesel engine in 1895.
In 1900 at the World Exhibition in Paris, the engine was demonstrated
using peanut oil as fuel at the request of the French government
(peanuts were common in France’s African colonies at that
time). Diesel came to believe that his engine would be a boon
to agricultural development, and that vegetable oils might someday
become as important as petroleum products. Petroleum diesel came
to dominate the market for a variety of social and political reasons,
including its relatively cheaper cost, and the fact that it was
a byproduct of gasoline production. But, with today’s soaring
oil prices, Rudolf Diesel’s notions about the importance
of vegetable oils seem prophetic as biodiesel demands increasing
attention from many audiences.
Biodiesel is produced through a chemical process
that involves the separation of glycerin from fatty acids and
binding of those acids to alcohol molecules. It may sound complex,
but across the country, a growing number of private citizens are
producing biodiesel using simple production kits that can be purchased
on the Internet. Any vegetable oil, not just soybean oil, may
be used. Animal fats may also be used, though vegetable oils work
better. Oils from algae can even be used. Biodiesel offers similar
power and lower emissions as compared to petroleum diesel and
is as biodegradable as sugar, making it an environmentally friendly
alternative that can reduce dependence on foreign oil.
WMRC works with Illinois industries, businesses
and citizens to reduce waste and prevent pollution – thus
the interest in both the used cooking oil waste stream and cleaner
burning, renewable fuels like biodiesel. WMRC researchers are
hoping to explore the use of other industrial wastes and byproducts
in the production of biodiesel to assist businesses and organizations
in turning what might otherwise be seen as a disposal burden into
a valuable commodity.
“Currently we’re investigating the use
of byproducts and oily wastes from a few large food processing
companies in Illinois,” says Lindsey. “We’ve
found that samples collected from these companies can indeed be
used to produce biodiesel. We’ve also received interest
from the owner of a company that picks up waste oil and grease
from food processors and restaurants. He uses diesel trucks to
pick up and transport his shipments, so the possibility of using
the waste he collects to produce biodiesel that could then power
his own fleet is very appealing.”
The use of oil from algae presents the possibility
of working with Publicly Owned Treatment Works (POTWs), brownfields,
lagoons, or other sites where algae is an unwanted reality, to
create a situation in which water is cleaned while renewable fuel
is produced, on site. Algae can even be cultivated for the purpose
of producing biodiesel efficiently. Lindsey says that some algae
produce oil at rates 40 times faster than the most productive
terrestrial oil-producing plants.
As the project progresses, there may be opportunities
for WMRC to provide technical assistance and workshops regarding
biodiesel production not only to industry but also to schools,
private citizens, and farmers. At least one school has expressed
interest in having its industrial arts students produce biodiesel
from waste cooking oil generated in the cafeteria for use in school
buses.
The
scientists at WMRC also hope to explore alternative crops, such
as sunflowers, as sources of oil for biodiesel production, expanding
the benefits of the biodiesel feedstock market to a wider range
of agricultural operations. Farmers might also benefit from the
use of manure as a fuel feedstock, or from the substitution of
ethanol for the methanol commonly used in the process—both
possibilities the WMRC researchers are investigating.
“Given the environmental benefits of using
biodiesel, the inherent efficiency of the Diesel engine, the economic
and social issues associated with dependence on petroleum, and
the fact that biodiesel can be integrated into our country’s
existing fuel infrastructure, it makes sense to pursue biodiesel
as an alternative fuel,” says Lindsey.
For more information about WMRC and its programs,
visit www.wmrc.uiuc.edu.