High-pressure crystallisation studies of biodiesel and methyl stearate†
Abstract
The widespread use of biodiesel as a renewable fuel offers many potential advantages, but at the same time presents challenges for modern internal combustion engines, particularly for those that involve high-pressure injection of fuel into the combustion chamber. At the typical elevated pressures used in such engines, biodiesel can crystallise and block fuel filters and injection nozzles, thereby causing engine failure. In this study, optical studies and Raman spectroscopy of a typical biodiesel sample contained in a diamond-anvil cell show that biodiesel initially crystallises at ca. 0.2 GPa and then undergoes a series of structural changes on further increase of pressure. On account of the complex composition of biodiesel, this study focused on one of its main components – methyl stearate. Using a combination of Raman spectroscopy, X-ray powder diffraction and neutron powder diffraction, it was shown that methyl stearate exhibits rich polymorphic behaviour when subjected to elevated pressures up to 6.3 GPa. Under non-hydrostatic conditions, pressures as low as 0.1 GPa converted Form V to crystallites of Form III that typically adopt plate-like morphologies. This observation has implications for the pressure-induced crystallisation of biodiesel containing high proportions of methyl stearate because of the potentially serious consequences for blocking of injection nozzles in engines. Four phase transitions over the pressure range of 0.1 GPa to 6.3 GPa were also observed. Form III was recovered on decompression to ambient pressure. High-pressure neutron powder diffraction studies of a perdeuterated sample showed that Form V persisted up to 3.11 GPa. This contrast in behaviour between the X-ray and neutron studies may be a consequence of deuteration, or of compression under non-hydrostatic versus hydrostatic conditions.
- This article is part of the themed collection: The effects of extreme conditions on molecular solids