Physical, Chemical, and Performance Properties of Biodiesel Fuels: A Comparative Study of Lipid-Based Feedstocks
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Current State of Biodiesel Production and Assessment of Feedstock Availability
3. Fatty Acid Composition of Biodiesel Samples
4. Properties of Biodiesel Based on Different Types of Lipid Feedstock
- Cetane number, which affects the power and efficiency of the engine;
- Fractional composition, which determines the completeness of combustion, smoke, and toxicity of exhaust gases;
- Viscosity and density, which ensure regular fuel supply, atomization in the combustion chamber, and efficiency of the filtration system;
- Low-temperature properties that affect the operation of the power system at low ambient temperatures;
- Degree of cleanliness, which characterizes the reliability of coarse and fine filters and the engine cylinder-piston group;
- Flash point, which determines the conditions for the safe use of fuel in diesel engines;
- The presence of sulfur compounds, unsaturated hydrocarbons, and metals that affect the formation of soot, corrosion, and wear of engine parts.
4.1. Density
4.2. Viscosity
4.3. Pour Point
4.4. Heat of Combustion
4.5. Cetane Number
4.6. Flash Point
4.7. Oxidative Stability
4.8. Comparative Analysis of Benefits and Trade-Offs for Different Lipid Feedstocks
5. SWOT Analysis and Regional Considerations for Biodiesel Feedstocks
6. Conclusions
- Diversifying feedstock sources, especially incorporating non-food and waste-based oils;
- Supporting research and development in relation to high-yield, low-input crops like camelina and algae;
- Investing in decentralized infrastructure for processing local waste oils and fats;
- Aligning production practices with EU sustainability directives, especially RED III.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
BE | n-butyl ester |
EE | Ethyl ester |
FA | Fatty acid |
GHG | Greenhouse gas |
ME | Methyl ester |
RED | Renewable Energy Directive |
UCO | Used cooking oil |
USO | Used sunflower oil |
Appendix A
FA | FA Structural Formula | Feedstock Where FA Is Typically Found |
---|---|---|
C12:0 | Coconut oil | |
C16:0 | Palm oil, soybean oil, coconut oil, rapeseed oil, camelina oil, beef fat, pork fat, chicken fat, J. curcas, C. inophyllum, C. pentandra, N. gaditana oil, H. pluvalis oil | |
C18:0 | Coconut oil, beef fat, pork fat, chicken fat, J. curcas, C. inophyllum, C. pentandra | |
C18:1 | Rapeseed oil, palm oil, soybean oil, camelina oil, beef fat, pork fat, chicken fat, H. pluvalis oil | |
C18:2 | Soybean oil, camelina oil, rapeseed oil, palm oil, pork fat, chicken fat, H. pluvalis oil | |
C18:3 | Rapeseed oil, soybean oil, camelina oil, UCO, H. pluvalis oil | |
C18:1(OH) | Ricinoleic acid | |
C18:CE | C. pentandra oil | |
C20:0 | Camelina oil | |
C20:1 | Camelina oil, rapeseed oil | |
C20:5 | N. gaditana oil, H. pluvalis oil |
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Feedstock | Oil Content, % * | Carbon Chain Length of FA | Content of Unsaturated FA, % * | Advantages | Disadvantages |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
First-generation feedstock | |||||
Coconut [16,17] | 49–88 | 8–16 | 5–10 | High oil yields; low molecular weight; low degree of unsaturation; high chemical and oxidation stability; low demands for cultivation; environmental safety | Risk of competition with the food industry; uncertainty on low-temperature properties; tropical origin |
Palm [13,18] | 30–60 | 12–20 | 20–50 | Average–high oil yields; low demands for cultivation; stable supply chain; good chemical and oxidation stability | High molecular weight; average–high degree of unsaturation; poor low-temperature properties; complex production process due to acid catalyst pretreatment |
Rapeseed [16,19,20] | 35–46 | 16–22 | 78–90 | High level of production technology development; widely grown in Europe and Ukraine | Low–average oil yields; high molecular weight; high degree of unsaturation; low chemical and oxidation stability; competition with the food industry; high demands during cultivation |
Second-generation feedstock | |||||
Camelina [20,21,22,23] | 30–45 | 16–22 | 65–88 | No competition with the food industry; fits crop rotation; low demands for cultivation; low production costs; environmental safety | Low oil yields; high molecular weight; high degree of unsaturation; low chemical and oxidation stability |
Jatropha curcas [7,8,9,13] | 30–40 | 16–22 | 70–80 | No competition with the food industry; drought resistant; grows on marginal lands | Low yield; toxic; not widely cultivated in Europe and Ukraine |
Castor oil [7,8,19,24] | 35–55 | C18 mainly | >88 | High ricinoleic acid content; drought resistant; high lubricity | Very-high viscosity; toxic residues; high degree of unsaturation; low chemical and oxidation stability; limited availability in Europe |
Third-generation feedstock | |||||
Microalgae [25,26,27,28,29] | 30–70 | 12–20 | 56–75 | Environmental safety; high oil yields; no competition with food industry; short cultivation period | Low oil yields; high production costs; far from commercial scale production; average–high degree of unsaturation |
Used cooking oil (UCO) [12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35] | Up to 80 | 14–20 | 45–56 | High oil yields; low production costs; a way of organic waste utilization; a wide variety of sources | High molecular weight; average–high degree of unsaturation; low chemical and oxidation stability; more complex production process; uncertainty of product composition and properties |
Animal fat [36,37,38,39] | Up to 80 | 14–24 | 37–63 | High oil yields; low production costs; higher energy content; way of organic waste utilization | Average–high degree of unsaturation; poor low-temperature properties; varying molecular weight with uncertainty of product properties; low chemical and oxidation stability; more complex production process |
Feedstock Group | Generation | Feedstock | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Edible oils | First generation | Rapeseed oil | [6,15,16,19,20] |
Sunflower oil | [6,7,8,15,21,41] | ||
Camelina oil | [6,10,16,20,22,23,36] | ||
Soybean oil | [40,42,43] | ||
Palm oil | [7,13,41,42] | ||
Coconut oil | [6,16,17,41,42] | ||
Non-edible oils and microalgae | Second generation | Castor oil | [19,24,44] |
J. curcas oil | [7,8,13,42,44] | ||
Calophyllum inophyllum oil | [7,8,42,44] | ||
Ceiba pentandra oil | |||
Third generation | Haematococcus pluvalis oil | [25,26,27,28,29,45,46,47,48] | |
Nannochloropsis gaditana oil | |||
Food industry waste | Third generation | UCO | [12,30,31,32,33,34,35] |
Used sunflower oil (USO) | [12,30,31,34] | ||
Chicken fat | [11,13,15,37,38] | ||
Pork fat | [11,13,15,38] | ||
Beef fat | [11,13,15,38,39] |
Feedstock | Density | Viscosity | Pour Point | Cetane Number | Calorific Value | Oxidative Stability | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rapeseed oil | Medium | Medium | Moderate | High | Moderate | Low | Good balance; standard in Europe |
Sunflower oil | Medium | Medium | Moderate | High | Moderate | Low | Similar to rapeseed; slightly better cold flow |
Coconut oil | Low | Low | Poor (high pour point) | High | Low | High | Excellent oxidative stability; poor cold performance |
Palm oil | High | High | Very Poor | High | High | High | Good cetane; not suitable for cold climates |
Castor oil | Very High | Very High | Excellent (very low) | Moderate | Moderate | Low | Unique due to ricinoleic acid; very high viscosity |
Camelina oil | Medium | Medium | Moderate | Moderate–High | Moderate | Low | Cold-tolerant; good for marginal land |
UCO | Medium | Medium–High | Variable | Moderate | Moderate | Moderate | Cost-effective; requires purification |
Animal fat | High | Medium–High | Very Poor | High | High | Moderate | Good energy content; poor cold flow |
Microalgae (e.g., N. gaditana) | Medium | High | Good | Moderate | Moderate | Moderate | Promising but needs tech refinement |
J. curcas oil | Medium | Medium | Moderate | Moderate | Moderate | Low | Non-edible; still under evaluation |
C. pentandra oil | Medium | Medium | Moderate | Unknown | Unknown | Moderate | Contains cyclopropene FAs; needs further study |
Feedstock | Strengths | Weaknesses | Opportunities | Threats |
---|---|---|---|---|
Rapeseed | High oil yield; strong agronomic base; mature processing tech | Competes with food; moderate oxidative stability | Existing infrastructure in Ukraine and EU; good for B7-B20 blending | Market volatility; food security concerns; regulatory tightening |
UCO | Low cost; circular economy benefit; no land use | Quality variability; high FFA; purification required | Urban waste valorization; aligns with EU Green Deal on waste-to-energy | Supply instability; logistics challenges |
Animal fat | Abundant as meat industry byproduct; low cost; high cetane number | Poor cold flow; odor issues; complex purification | Excellent for winter blending with diesel; use in hybrid blends | Seasonal variation; societal resistance to animal-based fuels |
Camelina | Low input crop; non-food; fits into crop rotation; frost tolerant | Lower oil yield than rapeseed or sunflower | Grows on marginal land; compatible with EU biodiversity policies | Underdeveloped supply chains |
Microalgae | Highest theoretical oil yield; non-arable land use; potential for CO2 capture | High production costs; unproven at scale | Strategic long-term R&D; carbon-neutral potential; wastewater co-utilization | Commercial immaturity; economic unfeasibility in short term |
Criteria | Rapeseed | UCO | Animal Fat | Camelina | Microalgae |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Oil yield (L/ha/year) | 1000–1200 [9] | N/A (waste) | N/A (waste) | 800–1000 [22] | 15,000–80,000 (theoretical) [46] |
Feedstock cost (EUR/ton) | 700–900 [44] | 100–300 [32] | 50–200 [36] | 600–800 [4] | >1000 [43] |
Biodiesel production cost (EUR/L) | 0.80–1.00 [43] | 0.50–0.70 [43] | 0.60–0.90 [39] | 0.80–1.10 [10] | 3.00–6.00 [28] |
Processing complexity | Low | Medium | Medium | Low-Medium | Very High [46] |
GHG savings vs. diesel | ~40–50% [4] | 80–90% [14] | 75–85% [37] | ~50–60% [23] | >90% [27] |
Scalability (short term) | High | Medium | Medium | Medium | Low [55] |
EU Green Deal compatibility | Moderate | High | Moderate | High | Very High [5] |
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Boichenko, S.; Yakovlieva, A.; Zubenko, S.; Shkilniuk, I. Physical, Chemical, and Performance Properties of Biodiesel Fuels: A Comparative Study of Lipid-Based Feedstocks. Energies 2025, 18, 4274. https://doi.org/10.3390/en18164274
Boichenko S, Yakovlieva A, Zubenko S, Shkilniuk I. Physical, Chemical, and Performance Properties of Biodiesel Fuels: A Comparative Study of Lipid-Based Feedstocks. Energies. 2025; 18(16):4274. https://doi.org/10.3390/en18164274
Chicago/Turabian StyleBoichenko, Sergii, Anna Yakovlieva, Stepan Zubenko, and Iryna Shkilniuk. 2025. "Physical, Chemical, and Performance Properties of Biodiesel Fuels: A Comparative Study of Lipid-Based Feedstocks" Energies 18, no. 16: 4274. https://doi.org/10.3390/en18164274
APA StyleBoichenko, S., Yakovlieva, A., Zubenko, S., & Shkilniuk, I. (2025). Physical, Chemical, and Performance Properties of Biodiesel Fuels: A Comparative Study of Lipid-Based Feedstocks. Energies, 18(16), 4274. https://doi.org/10.3390/en18164274