| dc.description.abstract | The utilization of energy sources other than those derived from crude oil has currently
 increased. This is due to the depletion of fossil fuel supplies, rising crude oil prices, and
 environmental concerns. Due to their similar fuel qualities and cleaner emissions,
 alternative fuels like biofuels are becoming more significant as diesel replacements.
 Biodiesel may be blended with petroleum diesel at any concentration for use in a normal
 diesel engine. In this study, biodiesel was produced by transesterification with palm oil
 and methanol. The catalytic activity of gliricidia-biochar was studied and compared with
 standard catalysts. Compared to sodium hydroxide (NaOH) and potassium hydroxide
 (KOH), which ire commonly used as catalysts, Gliricidia biochar is cheap and easily
 available. To increase the catalytic activity, biochar was chemically modified with acid
 (H2SO4, HNO3) and base(KOH) treatments. To check how the standard catalyst affects
 the biodiesel efficiency, & biodiesel sample was made by adding sodium hydroxide
 (NaOH), and the properties of all produced biodiesel samples were compared. All
 Biodiesel samples were produced after the esterification of free fatty acids using the
 prepared catalysts. palm oil, and methanol at a reaction temperature of 65'C for one
 hour. The oil-to-methanol ratio was taken as 1 :1. The density, viscosity, flash point, fire
 point, acid value, and yield of the produced biodiesel were examined and tested by the
 biodiesel IS standard. The parameters of the biodiesel sample produced using
 unmodified biochar was similar to the biodiesel IS standard values (Density:
 892.6kg/m3, Viscosity: 16cp, flash point: 175'C, fire point: 195'C, Acid value: 0.25mg
 KOH/g and yield 84%). A maximum yield of 84% biodiesel could be obtained by
 applying unmodified biochar. The prepared biochar samples were characterized using
Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) analysis and scanning electron microscopy (SEM).
 The surface functional groups of biochar were identified by FTIR analysis. And the
 surface structures of biochar were identified by scanning electron microscopy. The
 findings suggested that an unmodified gliricidia biochar-based catalyst was a very
 promising choice for biodiesel production. | en_US |