Bulletin of Chemical Reaction Engineering & Catalysis
2021: BCREC Volume 16 Issue 3 Year 2021 (September 2021)

The Potential of Waste Cooking Oil B20 Biodiesel Fuel with Lemon Essential Oil Bioadditive: Physicochemical Properties, Molecular Bonding, and Fuel Consumption

Avita Ayu Permanasari (Department of Mechanical Engineering, Universitas Negeri Malang, || Indonesia Centre of Advanced Materials for Renewable Energy (CAMRY), Universitas Negeri Malang)
Muhammad Najib Mauludi (Department of Mechanical Engineering, Universitas Negeri Malang, || Indonesia)
Sukarni Sukarni (Department of Mechanical Engineering, Universitas Negeri Malang, || Indonesia Centre of Advanced Materials for Renewable Energy (CAMRY), Universitas Negeri Malang)
Poppy Puspitasari (Department of Mechanical Engineering, Universitas Negeri Malang, || Indonesia Centre of Advanced Materials for Renewable Energy (CAMRY), Universitas Negeri Malang)
Siti Nur Azella Zaine (Fundamental and Applied Sciences Department, Universiti Teknologi PETRONAS, 32610, Bandar Seri Iskandar, Perak)
Wahyunengsih Wahyunengsih (Development of Islamic Society Department, State Islamic University Syarif Hidayatullah Jakarta, Banten 15412, Tangerang Selatan, West Java)



Article Info

Publish Date
30 Sep 2021

Abstract

This study is motivated by the depletion of fossil fuels in nature, which is inversely proportional to the higher level of fuel oil consumption, so the need for alternative fuels, namely biodiesel. Biodiesel can be made using waste cooking oil because of its abundant quantity, low price, and not being reused. One of the efforts to achieve energy conservation and improve fuel quality is using bioadditives. A lemon essential oil can be used as a bio-additive because it is easily soluble in fuel and its oxygen-rich content can reduce the rate of fuel consumption. The process in this study is to produce biodiesel with waste cooking oil (WCO) using a transesterification process. Biodiesel samples containing the bioadditive lemon essential oil on B20 biodiesel with varying volume fraction (0%; 0.1%; 0.15%; 0.2%). In general, this research can be done in three steps. The first step is the characterization of the compound composition (GCMS) and functional group (FTIR) of diesel fuel, biodiesel, and lemon essential oil bioadditive. The second step is the characterization of the physicochemical properties (density, viscosity, flash point, calorific value) of B20 biodiesel with various concentrations of lemon essential oil bioadditive, then compared with SNI 7182:2015. The third step is determining the rate of fuel consumption in diesel engines. The results show that Biodiesel B20 with a volume fraction of 2% lemon essential oil bioadditive has a high ability to reduce the rate of fuel consumption. Copyright © 2021 by Authors, Published by BCREC Group. This is an open access article under the CC BY-SA License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0). 

Copyrights © 2021






Journal Info

Abbrev

bcrec

Publisher

Subject

Chemical Engineering, Chemistry & Bioengineering Chemistry

Description

Bulletin of Chemical Reaction Engineering & Catalysis (e-ISSN: 1978-2993), an international journal, provides a forum for publishing the novel technologies related to the catalyst, catalysis, chemical reactor, kinetics studies, and chemical reaction ...