View Single Post
  #4 (permalink)  
Old 27th February 2006, 05:20 PM
joe's Avatar
joe joe is offline
Moderator
 
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Sunshine Coast, QLD
Posts: 559
joe has contributed well to this forumjoe has contributed well to this forumjoe has contributed well to this forum
Re: Where To Get koh

Quote:
Originally Posted by darren leonadas
Hi Dodge ,
NaoH is sodium hydroxide or "just caustic flakes" and also comes in a granular form looking like salt.. KoH or Potassium Hydroxide also comes in flakes.
If you use any old Caustic soda it could have all sorts of additives or impurities added.
Dont follow the america way and use "caustic soda", just because you can get it as draino at a super market.
We at the melbourne biodiesel club who are tried and tested at making biodiesel would recommend only use pure KoH. I do not have the contact of which chemical supplier we use at hand at the moment but can find out.
If you want a quality guaranteed chemical reaction to make biodiesel you must titrate the FFA's in your oil and use KoH only in the formulae
{(T + 3.5) x 3 } x V = K
T= titration value with NaoH standard solution.
V= Volume of oil to be reacted in litres.
K= weight in grams of KoH.
good luck.

When using NaoH the formulae is (T+3.5) x V = Na
where Na is the weight in grams of NaoH.

Just dont use NaoH.

Join the Melbourne Biodiesel club.
In the future we would also like to test a "standard solution" of KoH for titration. Although we have learned from industry standards NaoH is the "Standard solution" for titration. However KoH is the preferred alkaline for biodiesel reaction as it goes into methoxide solution easier, and always creates a better result.
And the grey water from water wash can be used as a fertilizer.
Cheers,, Darren.
Hi Darren,

I agree with everything you have said here for all of the reasons you have listed. However you have lost me with the equation you have written.

Quote:
{(T + 3.5) x 3 } x V = K
T= titration value with NaoH standard solution.
V= Volume of oil to be reacted in litres.
K= weight in grams of KoH.

Why are you using a NaOH standard solution to titrate and then converting this amount to KOH. I think showing new users how to convert serves no purpose as there is no need to convert. You titrate with one or the other and you will be using the same, thus no need for conversion.

Just for the record - I am using 7 grams of KOH as a base and most oil I'm collecting is between 1-3grams titration.

Cheers
Joe
Reply With Quote