Abstract

The thermal cracking and the thermal catalytic cracking of soybean oil were evaluated for the production of biofuels as an alternative to fossil fuels. The catalyst proposed for the cracking reaction was bauxite, a high-acidity and low-cost catalyst. The chromatographic profile of the biofuels obtained by cracking showed hydrocarbon compounds such as alkanes, alkenes and aromatics, as well as some oxygenated compounds such as carboxylic acids, ketones and alcohols. The products generated by the thermal catalytic cracking process showed better results than the thermal cracking products because of the low quantity of acids present. The catalyst used was thus shown to act in the secondary cracking process, in which the fatty acids decompose and generate hydrocarbons.

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