Abstract

AbstractHydrogenation of vegetable oils under supercritical conditions can involve a homogeneous one‐phase system, or alternatively two supercritical components in the presence of a condensed phase consisting of oil and a solid catalyst. The former operation is usually conducted in flow reactors while the latter mode is more amenable to stirred, batch‐reactor technology. Although many advantages have been cited for the one‐phase hydrogenation of oils or oleochemicals using supercritical carbon dioxide or propane, its ultimate productivity is limited by the oil solubility in the supercritical fluid phase as well as unconventional conditions that affect the hydrogenation. In this study, a dead‐end reactor has been utilized in conjunction with a head‐space consisting of either a binary fluid phase consisting of varying amounts of carbon dioxide mixed with hydrogen or neat hydrogen for comparison purposes. Reaction pressures up to 2000 psi and temperatures in the range of 120–140°C have been utilized with a conventional nickel catalyst to hydrogenate soybean oil. Depending on the chosen reaction conditions, a wide variety of end products can be produced having different iodine values, percentage trans fatty acid content, and dropping points or solid fat indices. Although addition of carbon dioxide to the fluid phase containing hydrogen retards the overall reaction rate in most of the studied cases, the majority of products have low trans fatty acid content, consistent with a nonselective mode of hydrogenation.

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