Determination of Biodiesel Blending Percentages Using Natural Abundance Radiocarbon Analysis: Testing the Accuracy of Retail Biodiesel Blends

Christopher M. Reddy*, Jared A. DeMello, Catherine A. Carmichael, Emily E. Peacock, Li Xu and J. Samuel Arey
Department of Marine Chemistry and Geochemistry, Department of Geology and Geophysics, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543, and Laboratory of Biochemistry and Computational Chemistry, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Lausanne, Switzerland
Environ. Sci. Technol., 2008, 42 (7), pp 2476–2482
DOI: 10.1021/es071814j
Publication Date (Web): February 27, 2008
Copyright © 2008 American Chemical Society
* Corresponding author phone: (508)-289-2316 ; fax: (508) 457-2164; e-mail: creddy@whoi.edu.
,

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.

,

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology.

Abstract

Blends of biodiesel and petrodiesel are being used increasingly worldwide. Due to several factors, inaccurate blending of these two mixtures can occur. To test the accuracy of biodiesel blending, we developed and validated a radiocarbon-based method and then analyzed a variety of retail biodiesel blends. Error propagation analysis demonstrated that this method calculates absolute blend content with ± 1% accuracy, even when real-world variability in the component biodiesel and petrodiesel sources is taken into account. We independently confirmed this accuracy using known endmembers and prepared mixtures. This is the only published method that directly quantifies the carbon of recent biological origin in biodiesel blends. Consequently, it robustly handles realistic chemical variability in biological source materials and provides unequivocal apportionment of renewable versus nonrenewable carbon in a sample fuel blend. Analysis of retail biodiesel blends acquired in 2006 in the United States revealed that inaccurate blending happens frequently. Only one out of ten retail samples passed the specifications that the United States Department of Defense requires for blends that are 20% biodiesel (v/v; referred to as B20).

Tools

History

  • Published In Issue April 01, 2008
  • Article ASAPFebruary 27, 2008
  • Received: July 22, 2007
    Revised: January 17, 2008
    Accepted: January 24, 2008

Recommend & Share

Related Content

Other ACS content by these authors: