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Catalytic Transesterification Of Waste Cooking Oil Using Fe-modified Chicken Bone Catalyst: Characterization And Optimization
Journal
Sains Malaysiana
Date Issued
2025
Author(s)
Nurul Izzati Saharuddin
Muhammad Afiq Danial Mohamed Nassir
Aina Zulaikha Muzafar Shah
Tengku Shafazila Tengku Saharuddin
Syahirah Yahya
DOI
http://doi.org/10.17576/jsm-2025-5402-15
Abstract
Food waste, including non-reusable materials like chicken bones, forms a significant portion of solid waste. In Malaysia, approximately 540,000 tons of waste cooking oil (WCO) is discarded annually without proper treatment. Chicken bones, rich in calcium, can be utilized as a heterogeneous catalyst in biodiesel production, addressing waste management issues. However, the use of chicken bone as a catalyst presents challenges such as the unmodified chicken bones often require a pre-treatment step to reduce high free fatty acid (FFA) content in WCO to prevent saponification, limiting their efficiency. Hence, this research endeavors to innovate by converting WCO into biodiesel via a transesterification reaction, leveraging waste chicken bones as a catalyst. The calcined waste chicken bone (CB) was modified to form 5 wt% Fe-CB, and 10 wt% Fe-CB. The catalysts were found to have similar physical characteristics in terms of the structure and surface morphology observed from XRD, N2 adsorption-desorption, and SEM analysis. Among the catalysts, 10 wt% Fe-CB, produced the highest yield of fatty acid methyl esters (FAME), reaching 72.52%, under mild reaction conditions (10:1 methanol-to-WCO molar ratio, 1 wt% catalyst loading, 60 oC reaction temperature and 4 h reaction time). The capability of 10 wt% Fe-CB to produce a higher fatty acid methyl esters (FAME) yield than 5 wt% Fe-CB and calcined CB was due to the presence of CaO with binary transition metal oxides providing both acidic and basic sites, allowing for more efficient WCO conversion.
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