CFD Analysis of Bubble Distribution in Non-Catalytic Reactor for Production of Biodiesel Fuel
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Date
2011-09Author
Wulandani, Dyah
Miura, Tomoki
H. Tambunan, Armansyah
Nabetani, Hiroshi
Hagiwara, Shoji
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Biodiesel fuel is a biodegradable of diesel fuel that is produced through trans-esterification between vegetable oil and methanol. The non-catalytic biodiesel fuel production method called superheated methanol vapor in the bubble column reactor which is used in this research has advantage; no requiring purification before and after reaction, due to the not existing of catalyst, so both initial and running costs are to be reduced. However the reaction rate of biodiesel fuel production is still lower than other method (catalytic method). The previous studies noted that the contact surface between the methanol bubble and the oil acts as the limiting factor for enhancing the reaction rate. The contact surface area is influenced by the bubble size distribution, which in tum affected by the reactor design. Therefore, this study is devoted to the analysis of the bubble distribution in non catalytic reactor to increase the reaction rate of biodiesel fuel production using the Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) method. CFD can minimize the experimental design cost and time by simulating various experimental conditions to show a real phenomenon, with a reasonable accuracy and precision. Based on the proper CFD modeling we obtained at the previous work, ten scenarios of treatment and design of obstacle installed in the column reactor were simulated to fmd the highest contact surface area. The CFD modeling represented well to describe the bubble behavior. A significant conclusion both of simulation and experimental results are that by utilizing of the obstacle in the reactor, contact surface between oil and methanol vapor increase which is impact to the reaction rate of biodiesel fuel production about 2.8 times over than without obstacle.